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    Major English Authors 2 2/20/14 Gulliver: The Mock-Hero Throughout Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathon Swift‚ Gulliver continually proves how he is playing the role of a mock-hero. As many of the classic heroes hold traits such as bravery‚ intelligence‚ and leadership‚ Gulliver’s character pokes fun at that classic idea. Many epics consist of great heroes going on treacherous journeys where they come across man-eating beasts or other large feats‚ where as in Gulliver’s Travels‚ he goes on a journey

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    Modest Proposal

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    1. In “A Modest Proposal”‚ Swift begins to voice his opinion of Ireland’s poverty and suffering individuals. After reading the first few words‚ a reader would think Swift has some sympathy for these poor people; however‚ Swift’s satire ends up having a twist. Swift states‚ “I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in London‚ that a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious‚ nourishing‚ and wholesome food‚ whether stewed‚ roasted‚ baked‚ or boiled.”

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    Jonathan Swift‚ author of “A Modest Proposal”‚ wrote about the starving people of Ireland in the early 1700′s.   The purpose of his argument is to raise awareness to the wealthy of the issue.  Swift‚ a priest at St. Patrick’s Cathedral composed the satirical essay due to his want for a resolution for the underprivileged people in Ireland.   Swift wants to bring the issue to light for the wealthy Irish class.  Swift assumes that his audience will be upset and bothered by his suggestion to sell and

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    who constituted 80 percent of the population and owned less than one-third of the land. As the Protestant English landowners took over in the 1700s‚ the Irish Catholics dove deeper into lives of famine and poverty. In “A Modest Proposal”‚ Jonathan Swift presents several claims and supporting evidence that the consuming of the Irish nation’s growing number of children will solve the poverty epidemic as well as decrease religious enemies. As any serious proposal to solve a problem does‚ "A Modest Proposal"

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    all knowledge and have no charity‚ I am nothing.” /St Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians‚ 13‚ 2 / Each of the four books of Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels discusses one aspect of human nature. The discussions’ language is rather satirical than an earnest tone. The first book is about the physical aspect‚ the voyage to Brobdingnag focuses on the “Homo politicus”‚ the political man. The third book is about intellect‚ while in the land if the Houyhnhnms we can “meet” the moral man.

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    Analyzing Satire Unit Lesson

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    Plan - Analyzing Satire Tara Seale - AP Language and Composition   Introduction: According to Wyatt Mason in an online article published in the ​ New York Times Magazine titled “​ My Satirical Self​ ‚” readers in the 21st century have “taken shelter in the ridiculous.” He provides an excerpt from ​ The Onion​ ‚ a satirical online news source referenced as “America’s Finest News Source‚” as an example of an escape from the inescapable ridiculousness of society‚ politics‚ and other vice and follies. New

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    A Modest Proposal

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    Assignment #1: Surprise Ending in The Modest Proposal Syreeta Bruster Professor Lynn Wilson World Cultures II – HUM 112 November 12‚ 2012 A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift is a satirical story with lots of sarcasm. This proposal was written to shock or force the government into a reaction. As the government read his proposal it should bring about a response. This proposal suggests a “barbaric solution” that amounts purely to cannibalism. Mr. Swift’s idea is to help end poverty and

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    A Modest Proposal Essay

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    *ABTRACT* 1. Introduction A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift was written in 1729 using diction and political and social references from that time period‚ which may provide a challenge for a student reader in a 2011 classroom. The full title of Swift’s essay is “A Modest Proposal for Preventing the Children of Poor People from Being a Burden to their Parents‚ or the Country‚ and for making them Beneficial to the Publick.” This satirical essay is attempting to find a simple method for converting

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    Swift’s Proposal Cannibalism and Satire in Swift’s Proposal In the article “A Modest Proposal” (1729)‚ Jonathan Swift effectively vents his aggravation in regard to the treatment of the poor in Ireland. Swift is frustrated with the Irish as well in their inability to get themselves out of the state in which they find themselves. Irony is the weapon used in this satirical essay in which Swift writes about his “proposal” of selling infants to wealthy citizens for food. The shock value that is delivered

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    ‘The Roaring Twenties’: a decade of unprecedented affluence that shaped America’s consumerist society as it is today. The epoch entailed a plethora of quick money‚ sparkling appliances and loose morals that reincarnated the ‘American Dream’ to comprise much more than its original pledge for ‘life‚ liberty and the pursuit of land’. Fitzgerald’s infamous stance on the American Dream thematically appears throughout ‘The Great Gatsby’ where a tactful succession of language and characterisation critiques

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