Jonathan Swift, Satire, and Gulliver's Travels Lesson

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  • Опубликовано: 9 мар 2013
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    This lesson gives students background information on Jonathan Swift, a conceptual introduction to satire, and background knowledge on Gulliver's Travels, especially Part 4. It's a good lesson to use before "A Modest Proposal" too.
    Below is the outline of the slides used in the lesson:
    Jonathan Swift, Satire, and Gulliver's Travels Lesson
    Biography of Swift
    Satire-Definition and Examples
    Background of Gulliver's Travels
    Connections to the Project
    Jonathan Swift, 1667-1745
    Born in Ireland of English, Anglican parents
    At a time when tensions between England and Ireland were high for political and religious reasons
    Conflicts with the English government over his family's politics after the English Civil War and over his writing
    Had a great sympathy for the Irish-became somewhat of a member of both cultures
    Became the Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin
    Satire
    A literary form (poetry, prose, or drama) that exaggerates tendencies to make people laugh as a form of protest
    Uses humor as a weapon
    A more enlightened form of sarcasm
    Can be subtle or blatant, and can be serious or silly
    Examples of Satire
    How Satire Works
    Literal Satire: looks, feels, seems just like realistic art, but little things are exaggerated to show how ridiculous they are
    Unrealistic Satire (like Gulliver's Travels): fantastic places and unrealistic settings serve as metaphors for the world we live in
    When people laugh, they are more relaxed and willing to engage with a speaker or artist
    When people see things that aren't them but who do the same things they do, they can look at those things more objectively
    Gulliver's Travels
    Travel narrative-Lemuel Gulliver goes to four places:
    Liliput-the land of the small people
    Brobdingnag-the land of the giants
    Laputa-the land of the "scientists"
    The Land of the Houyhnhnms-talking horses who have more reason than men
    Gulliver's Travels
    Liliput-Swift makes fun of people's pettiness; for example, two political parties fight furiously over which end of an egg should be cracked
    Brobdingnag-By encountering giant humans, Gulliver shows us just how disgusting people are
    Laputa-The scientists of Laputa are so busy with all of their imaginary learning that their wives go astray
    Gulliver's Travels
    The Land of the Houyhnhnms
    In comparison to humans, horses seem very wise, just, and reasonable-so much for the Enlightenment
    Gulliver comes to identify with the horses and not the Yahoos-a race of human-ish creatures that have all of humanity's worst qualities
    What is a human? What is an animal? Are humans all that great?
    Connection to the Project
    Swift shows us slavery, racism, and genocide, and he asks us questions about all of them
    He makes us question the Enlightenment and the very idea of civilization and who is civilized
    Like many Enlightenment thinkers, he realized that Europe needed to humble itself
    Lesson Completed-Good Job
    I have provided a read-along for this
    Be prepared to write about satirical episodes in the selections from the book that I have given you-like a metaphor, what's the tenor and what's the vehicle, and what's Swift's purpose for the satire?

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