The juxtaposition of morbid and farcical elements (in writing or drama) to give a disturbing effect.
1I like the black humor of much of the dialogue as well.
2But the violent movement discharged the tension of his black humor.
3And she noted with pleasure that he, too, was in a black humor.
4Because of Woo's own black humor, though, he is more than a Peckinpah impersonator.
5But the black humor of despair could not last.
6Miike's films are overrated, but at least they're peppered with black humor and outrageous doings.
7Fermented beverages and black humor are how we cope.
8Homes, whose first name is Amy, often laces her novels with violence, sex and black humor.
9It was an art form, part of the military culture like bawdy songs and black humor.
10It felt a bit like a hangman's noose, he thought with a flash of black humor.
11Sometimes black humor is the only kind we can summon, but even dark laughter can sustain.
12He found himself wondering in a rush of black humor if he would be fried or sautéed.
13Laurence thought, with black humor, that there was every reason: he knew Kaneko better than any other man present.
14A tapestry of heartbreak, dread, looming violence and black humor, it resembled nothing so much as a sci-fi Sopranos.
15That sort of black humor.
16Ball seemed to realize for the first time that his black humor was not being received with wild enthusiasm.
Esta colocação é formada por:
Black humor ao longo do tempo
Black humor nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América