Satire

Senior Seminar                                                                        Name: ________________________

Satire

 

 

Satire–a form of humor, written in poetry or prose, which makes a subject or a person appear ridiculous.  Its purpose is to point out prevailing vices or follies (through humor) which should be corrected.  In other words, satire combines criticism with humor in order to change that which seems wrong.

 

In English literature, satire began with Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales and flourished in the 18th century with Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift.

 

 

Satire can have two MOODS:

  1. GENTLE / SYMPATHETIC — where the humor is mild and the author sees the
  2. problem as more foolish than evil
  3. BITING / ANGRY –where the ridicule is savage and the author sees the problem as urgent and severe, possibly evil
  4. Satire can be directed at several kind of TARGETS:
  1. THE INDIVIDUAL — the author make fun of one person’s behavior and beliefs because he feels that they are foolish or malicious. One example is Swift’s “The
  2. Death of the Late Famous General.”
  3. THE GROUP — the target can be a political party, a club, a social class, a profession,
  4. even a whole society. One example is Buchwald’s “Is There Life on Earth?”
  5. THE “SYSTEM” — this often involves large systems of beliefs, such as religion, or human nature in general. One example is Swift’s “A Modest Proposal.”

How it Works

Satire works on the principles of IRONY and EXAGGERATION.

  1. IRONY — things are just the opposite of what they seem. Something small and trivial is made to seem important or serious; known as the “mountain out of a molehill” method. This can be reversed, as when something very important is made trivial, to show that people aren’t paying enough attention to this problem. In either case, the
  2. subject is described as the opposite of what really exists.
  3. EXAGGERATION — every idea and concept is carried to the extreme, to capture the reader’s attention. No reasonable halfway measures are used–something is either all good or all bad.

Forms to Use

  1. FANTASY — the setting of the satire is an imaginary world or time. It softens the criticism by removing it from reality. The idea behind it: people are more willing to
  2. consider criticism if the finger isn’t pointing directly at them.
  3. MOCK HEROICS — take the realistic problem or dispute and turn it into a highly
  4. exaggerated epic battle.
  5. FORMAL PROPOSAL — prepare a highly serious, highly rational proposal for action
  6. on this problem, but make it totally unreasonable and exaggerated.
  7. PRAISE / BLAME — take something that is bad and praise it without boundary, or take something good and cut it to shreds. Either way, the reader will appreciate the irony the author intends. Satire is more than ridicule: it is ridicule with a purpose. Just making fun of someone because you don’t like them is not satire. You must focus on the problem, the foolishness or wrongs that ought to be changed. Find a way to make these seem ridiculous, but make the reader think about the problem at the same time he/she is laughing, and you have written an effective satire.
  8. Note:

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