Attardo, S. (1994). Linguistic Theories of Humor. Mouton de Gruyter.
Brodie, I. (2008). Stand-up Comedy as a Genre of Intimacy. Ethnologies, 30(2), 153-180.
Double, O. (2014). Getting the Joke: The Inner Workings of Stand-Up Comedy. Bloomsbury.
Gilbert, J. (2004). Performing Marginality: Humor, Gender, and Cultural Critique. University of Minnesota Press.
Limon, J. (2000) Stand Up Comedy in Theory, or Abjection in America. Duke University Press.
Kuipers, G. (2008). The Sociology of Humor. In Raskin, V. (Ed.), The Primer of Humor Research. Mouton de Gruyter.
Meier, M. R., & Schmitt, C. R. (Eds.). (2016). Standing up, speaking out: Stand-up comedy and the rhetoric of social change. Taylor & Francis.
Smith, D. (2018). Comedy and critique. Stand-up Comedy and the Professional Ethos of Laughter. Bristol University Press.
Tafoya, E. (2009). The legacy of the wisecrack: Stand-up comedy as the great American literary form. Universal-Publishers.
Oppliger, P. A., & Shouse, E. (Eds.). (2020). The Dark Side of Stand-Up Comedy. Springer International Publishing.
Tomsett, E. (2023) Stand-up Comedy and Contemporary Feminisms. Bloomsbury Publishing
Lockyer, S., Mills, B., & Peacock, L. (2011). Analysing stand-up comedy. Comedy Studies, 2(2), 99–100. https://doi.org/10.1386/cost.2.2.99_2