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Unit Five: Political Satire

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Title: Unit Five: Political Satire


1
Unit Five Political Satire
  • Lesson 8
  • The Early Jonathan Swift

2
Jonathan Swift
  • For the most part, other than A Modest Proposal
    and Gullivers Travels, Swift is out of critical
    vogue now.
  • Theres not a lot of work being done on him
    (relatively speaking).
  • But if Swift only wrote these two pieces, hed be
    considered a genius today.

3
Born and Died in Dublin
  • Born a posthumous child of his fathers in 1667
  • After spending a good part of his life in London,
    he returned to Dublin as the Dean of St.
    Patricks (Anglican)
  • Church 1713
  • Died in Dublin 1745

4
Prolific Writer
  • Much of it was political satire, and the subjects
    about which he wrote no longer concern us
  • GT is not a childrens book at all--its very
    intricate satire of Swifts day.

5
Brutal Style
  • The brutality of Swifts prose is now out of
    vogue.
  • Swift had a harsh way of looking at things,
  • basically he was a misanthrope.
  • But as he pointed out in a letter to Alexander
    Pope,
  • Principally I hate and detest that animal called
    man although I heartily love John, Peter,
    Thomas, and so forth"

6
Other Traits
  • Hes also
  • highly scatological
  • misogynist
  • which I think is less a hatred of women and more
    his general dislike of stupidity and grossness,
    though he probably had some sexual hang-ups, as
    wed say today

7
Description of a City Shower
  • Representative of his works.
  • Scatological
  • Poking fun at people
  • Sees the darker side
  • Hes certainly not a cheerful writer

8
A Tale of a Tub
  • Swift's least classifiable work.
  • It drives readers a little mad.
  • And its a perfect example of Swift's devastating
    intellect at work.
  • By its end, little seems worth believing in.

9
From 1710, the cover of the 5th edition of Tale
of a Tub. This is a very typical pamphlet cover
page.
10
From Wikipedia.com
  • It is probably his most difficult satire, and
    possibly his most masterful. The Tale is a prose
    parody, which is divided up into sections of
    "digression" and "tale." The "tale" satirizes
    religious excess, while the digressions are a
    series of parodies of contemporary writing in
    literature, politics, theology, Biblical
    exegesis, and medicine. The overarching parody is
    of enthusiasm, pride, and credulity.

11
Tales Allegory
  • Concerns three brothers.
  • Each represents one of the primary branches of
    Christianity in the west.
  • Peter, oldest, stands for the Roman Catholic
    Church.
  • Jack, youngest, represents the various dissenting
    Protestant churches.
  • Martin, middle born, represent the 'via media' of
    the Church of England and Lutherans.

12
More Symbols
  • The brothers have inherited three coats
  • representing religious practice
  • From their father
  • representing God
  • They have his will to guide them.
  • representing the Bible

13
Lack of Unity
  • Although the will says that the brothers are
    forbidden from making any changes to their coats,
    they do nearly nothing but alter their coats from
    the start.
  • The allegory of the narrative is supposed to be
    an apology for the British church's refusal to
    alter its practice in accordance with Puritan
    demands and its continued resistance to alliance
    with the Roman church.

14
Wonderful Analogy
  • The change in British society brought about by
    the print revolution was roughly analogous to our
    own experiences with the Internet. Just as now a
    silly person may spend a small amount of money
    and publish silly opinions, so it was then. Just
    as now we are confronted with a staggering array
    of conspiracy theories, "secret" histories, signs
    of the apocalypse, "secrets" of politicians,
    "revelations" of prophets, alarms about household
    products, hoaxes, and outright fraud, so it was
    then. The problem for them, as for us, was
    telling true from false, credible from
    impossible.
  • From Wikipedia

15
Narrators Persona
  • Swift writes in the guise of someone who is
    excited and gullible about all the things the new
    world has to offer.
  • The narrator is in love with the modern age and
    feels that he is quite the equal (or superior) of
    any author who ever lived because he, unlike
    them, possesses 'technology' and opinions that
    are just plain newer.

16
Naïve and Proud
  • Swift seemingly asks the question of what a
    person with no discernment but with a thirst for
    knowledge would be like, and the answer is the
    narrator of Tale of a Tub

17
We Need Skeptics!
  • Swift was annoyed by people who were so eager to
    possess the newest knowledge that they failed to
    pose skeptical questions.
  • If he was not a particular fan of the
    aristocracy, he was a sincere opponent of
    democracy
  • which was often viewed then as the sort of "mob
    rule" that led to the worst abuses of the
    Interregnum.

18
Many Layers of Satire
  • Tub is most consistent in attacking misreading of
    all sorts.
  • Both in the narrative sections and the
    digressions, the single human flaw that underlies
    all the follies Swift attacks is over-figurative
    and over-literal reading, both of the Bible and
    of poetry and political prose.

19
Novel Work (But Not a Novel!)
  • Swift more or less invents prose parody.
  • the definition he offers is arguably a parody of
    John Dryden (a cousin) defining "parody" in the
    "Preface to the Satires."
  • Prior to Swift, parodies were imitations designed
    to bring mirth, but not primarily in the form of
    mockery.
  • The satire is relatively unique in that he offers
    no resolutions. While he ridicules any number of
    foolish habits, he never offers the reader a
    positive set of values to embrace.

20
What Follows
  • The rest of the lecture is a close line reading
    of the work.
  • Just listen carefully! I think its pretty
    self-evident.
  • But then I always think that!
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