html5-img
1 / 9

Satire – The Neoclassical Drama

Satire – The Neoclassical Drama. Moliere and Swift. Satire – making fun of current events or social structures through irony, sarcasm and wit /makes fun of moral and social views/ “tongue-in-cheek” humor. Moliere. French actor and playwright

alec
Télécharger la présentation

Satire – The Neoclassical Drama

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Satire – The Neoclassical Drama Moliere and Swift

  2. Satire – making fun of current events or social structures through irony, sarcasm and wit/makes fun of moral and social views/“tongue-in-cheek” humor

  3. Moliere • French actor and playwright • Dance and drama were very important to the French aristocracy/helped him promote his art • Established his own acting troupe in the court of Louis XIV (1660) • Master of Satire • Also used physical humor inspired by Commedia dell’arte

  4. Moliere Continued • Used 5 act development as seen in Greek and Renaissance (Shakespeare) • Superstition – he collapsed during a presentation of The Imaginary Invalid and died later in his home – was wearing yellow on stage – still seen as bad luck by some actors to wear yellow costumes on stage

  5. “A Modest Proposal” By Jonathan Swift

  6. What it is, and what’s it’s purpose? This is a social satire essay. Swift wrote this in order to make people aware of the abusive tactics that rich English landowners used against poor Irish Catholic peasants. He thought that England was “exploiting and oppressing Ireland.”

  7. The Situation Many Irishmen worked on farms owned by rich English landowners who charged them outrageous rents Frequently, the peasants could not pay their rental rates and feed their families Many of these Irish families constantly lived in danger of starvation The English Protestants viewed these Irish peasants as “dirty, immoral Catholics” who did nothing but procreate and cause trouble

  8. How Swift pokes fun at the English Swift proposes a VERY outrageous solution to the famine troubles plaguing the Irish Swift makes fun of the English’s view of the Irish Catholics by appearing to degrade them and say horrible things about them In reality, he is exposing how bigoted and horrible the English were against an otherwise hardworking people

  9. Reading Questions What is the “problem” that is supposedly causing so much trouble in Ireland? What are some of the nasty stereotypes about Irish Catholics that Swift makes fun of here? What is Swift’s “solution” to the starvation of the Irish people? What are some of the things that Swift suggests in order to carry out this “modest proposal?” List the “benefits” of his plan, as Swift states in his essay. At the end of his essay, Swift attempts to put the reader “at ease” by giving us the main reason as to why we should follow his plan and believe that he has everyone’s best interest at heart. What is that reason?

More Related