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Reading Satire

"Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own"--Jonathan Swift . Reading Satire.

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Reading Satire

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  1. "Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own"--Jonathan Swift Reading Satire

  2. Satire mainly exposes, ridicules, derides and denounces vice, folly, evil, stupidity as these qualities manifest themselves in persons, groups of persons, ideas, institutions, customs or beliefs.

  3. Satire is born of the instinct to protest; it is protest become art and a refinement of anger. • The typical satirist is a blend of idealist and realist. • Satire is a literary form of criticism.

  4. Sarcasm != Satire • Sarcasm is bitter or cutting speech; speech intended by its speaker to give pain to the person addressed. • Satire, on the other hand, ridicules human folly or vice with the purpose of bringing about reform or of keeping others from falling into similar folly or vice.

  5. Sarcasm • from Greek sarkasmos "a sneer, jest, taunt, mockery," from sarkazein "to speak bitterly, sneer," literally "to strip off the flesh” • The difference between satire and sarcasm is the difference between surgery and butchery. — Edward Nichols

  6. Determining the Satirist’s Attitude: Questions to Ask • Is his attitude mild, sympathetic, unemotional? Is it characterized by banter, a lightness of critical comment? • Is the attitude a reflection of intellectual scorn, of a mental irritation with those who live with self-delusions at the expense of others? • Is the attitude one of intense anger, hatred, and bitterness toward the harm which man inflicts on his fellows and towards the gross failure of man’s institutions? • Is it a sardonic comment, characterized by derision and mockery? • Does he wish to jolt the reader out of complacency and indifference? • Is the satirist’s aim a psychological one? Is he making a study of the motivations, sometimes noble, sometimes ignoble, behind foolish and destructive behavior?

  7. Two Forms of Satire Juvenalian – harsh • Tries to arouse moral indignation, anger • Writer is a serious moralist, a dedicated reformer • Attitude: Bitter, denunciatory, attacking vices of men Horatian – gentle • Tries to evoke a smile • Writer is urbane, sophisticated, man-of-the-world • Attitude: Amused at foibles of men

  8. Tools of Satire • Irony • Overstatement • Understatement • Invective • Lampoon • Caricature • Mock epic

  9. NFL Discontinues ‘Take Your Daughter to Work Day’

  10. The Onion Headlines • Police: iPhone Left In Hot Car For Three Hours • Tony Womo Out Three To Four Weeks With BwokenWiddleFingey • Wealthy Teen Nearly Experiences Consequence • Internet Explorer Makes Desperate Overture To Become Default Browser • 'I Am Under 18' Button Clicked For First Time In History Of Internet

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