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SatireSatire

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Journal 3-1• What is satire? What is the goal of

satire?

• What do you associate with “satire”?

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Defined• Satire mainly exposes and ridicules evil

and stupidity as these qualities manifest themselves in persons, groups of persons, ideas, institutions, customs or beliefs.

• Satire is born of the instinct to protest; it is protest become art and a refinement of anger.

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Two types• Horatian

Satire• Gentle• Tries to evoke a

smile• Writer is urbane,

sophisticated, man-of-the-world

• Attitude: Amused at foibles of men

• Juvenalian Satire

• Harsh• Tries to arouse moral

indignation, anger• Writer is a serious

moralist, a dedicated reformer

• Attitude: Bitter, denunciatory, attacking vices of men

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Horatian or Juvenalian?

You decide…

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Horatian or Juvenalian?

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Horatian or Juvenalian?

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Satirical Devices• All devices can work to create

satire: tone, simile, metaphor, personification, allusion, juxtaposition, shift, contrast, repetition, etc.

• But here are a few new devices that are also found in satire.

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Sarcasm• A harsh, personally directed

comment; to use praise to mock someone

• Example: To refer to a 98-pound weakling as a “real he-man”

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Overstatement/Exaggeration

• To say more than you mean to say; to exaggerate

• Example: I am so hungry, I could eat a horse.

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Understatement • To say less than you mean to say

• Example: When the computer crashes with your final project on it, and someone says, “Houston, we have a small problem here.”

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Parody • Mockery of a specific, known person, literary

work, movie, event (imitation of a thing in such a way as to make it look ridiculous)

• Example: General MacArthur said, “Old soldiers never die, they just fade away.” Parodies: “Old blondes never fade, they just dye away.” Or, “Old soldiers never die, but young men do.” (dye is also a pun)

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Irony• Usually situational, the opposite of

what is expected to happen happens

• Example: An Olympic swimmer drowns, a fire station burns down, etc.

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Generalization • Applying something to all cases,

neglecting differences

• Example: He wears glasses. Of course he made an A.

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Bathos• To go from the serious to the

ridiculous quickly

• Example: “I love my country, my job, my wife, and chocolate.”

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Pun • A play on words based on the

similarity of their sounds; using words that have different meanings

• Example: What type of guitar do fish like to play?

• A bass guitar

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• Many modern TV shows combine satirical and comical elements. The most prominent TV satire is the animated series The Simpsons

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Other examples are South Park Animated shows can easily use images of public figures and generally have greater latitude than conventional shows using actors.

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American Beauty is an acclaimed 1999 drama film that explores themes of love, freedom, beauty, self-liberation, existentialism, the search for happiness, and family against the backdrop of modern American suburbia.

American Beauty

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• Saved! is a 2004 satirical teen comedy about a girl (Malone) attending a Christian high school who becomes pregnant, she finds herself ostracized and demonized, as all of her former friends turn on her.

Saved!

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Mean GirlsCady Heron (Lohan) is a hit with The Plastics, the A-list girl clique at her new school, until she makes the mistake of falling for Aaron Samuels (Bennett), the ex-boyfriend of alpha Plastic Regina George (McAdams).

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Parodies in Film• Robin Hood Men in Tights• Spaceballs• Young Frankenstein• Epic Movie• Not Another Teen Movie


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