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SATIRE Notes? Lexicon? I don’t know.. DEFINITION  Writing that pokes fun at society’s or humanity’s inconsistencies, vices, and foibles as a impetus.

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Presentation on theme: "SATIRE Notes? Lexicon? I don’t know.. DEFINITION  Writing that pokes fun at society’s or humanity’s inconsistencies, vices, and foibles as a impetus."— Presentation transcript:

1 SATIRE Notes? Lexicon? I don’t know.

2 DEFINITION  Writing that pokes fun at society’s or humanity’s inconsistencies, vices, and foibles as a impetus for change  A literary mode based on the criticism of people through ridicule

3 JUST TO CLARIFY… Is it always funny?Is it always mean?  Not always. It’s main goal is not to entertain and amuse, but, rather, to reform.  No. It’s main goal is not to abuse, but, rather, to point out ways people/society could improve.  As such, satire does not make fun of things that cannot be changed (such as disabilities).  Generally, satire deals with groups of people or types of people rather than individuals. If you want to tell people the truth, make them laugh, otherwise they'll kill you.

4 MAJOR CATEGORIES OF SATIRE Direct/FormalIndirect/Informal  A first person narrator either directly addresses the reader or another character in the work (called the adversarius)  “On the Decay of the Art of Lying”  “A Modest Proposal”  Colbert Report  Satire is expressed through a narrative and the characters who are the butt of jokes are ridiculed by what they themselves say and do.  The king and duke in Mark Twain  Mrs. Bennett in Pride and Prejudice  The Simpsons

5 TYPES OF DIRECT SATIRE Horatian SatireJuvenalian Satire  Gentle, pokes fun with a witty, even indulgent tone  Encourages audience to laugh at itself  Light and humorous  Named after Roman lyric poet, Horace  Biting, bitter, angry  Points to corruption of human beings and institutions with a contemptuous, indignant tone  More clearly judgmental  Named after Juvenal, a Roman satirist

6 THE GENERAL METHOD  First, the targets are usually transformed from their complex selves to a simplification or exaggeration of their stance.  Second, targets are often relocated to a place that aids in the simplification or exaggeration of the issues Note: Satire does not follow a prescribed format. This is just a fairly common method for satire writers. Note: Satire does not follow a prescribed format. This is just a fairly common method for satire writers.

7 MAJOR TOOLS OF SATIRE  Parody:  A style, which imitates a subject, person, or style using humor  Burlesque  A literary term to describe a work that twists a serious issue or subject into a humorous one, or takes a humorous subject and treats it as though it is serious.  Caricature  a literary style focusing on one characteristic, quality, or feature of a person or group of people, exaggerating it to a humorous level

8 TOOLS OF SATIRE  Irony  Exaggeration  Understatement  Ambiguity  Innuendo  Caricature  Sarcasm  Allusion  Juxtaposition  Contrast  Look For:  A contrast between what the speaker says and how he/she says it  A contrast between ideas presented by the speaker  Things that just seem “wrong”


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