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Bellringer…

This text introduces satire and explores different types, techniques, and implications of the genre. It discusses the use of humor, irony, hyperbole, litotes, and caricature to convey a serious message. Includes examples and analysis.

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Bellringer…

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  1. Bellringer… • Examine the cartoon below. • What event is the artist alluding to in this cartoon? • What message is being implied? • Is the implication effective? Why or why not?

  2. Introduction toSatire

  3. OPTIC

  4. The Onion review. . . • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kyx1U9QjWVQ • We will be returning to the text and the movie The Hunger Games for a detailed analysis.

  5. The Art of Indirect Persuasion • If you’ve ever enjoyed watching late-night comedy shows, you know how effective and fun this approach can be when it comes to changing perception of the subjects being lampooned. • In the next two weeks we will be exploring SATIRE, how writers use a range of genres and techniques, including parody, to present their messages in indirect ways.

  6. The Art of Indirect Persuasion • Additionally, you’ll explore how diction and syntax can be used to create humor as well as a wide range of satirical tones. • Finally, you’ll explore how satirists manipulate and parody the conventions and content of other formats and genres to advance their purposes as writers. • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p3POpUm9RHI Jon Stewart on Phil Richardson and First Amendment

  7. Satire • Satireis a literary genre that uses irony, wit, and sometimes sarcasm to expose humanity’s vices and foibles, giving impetus, or momentum, to change or reform through ridicule. • It is a manner of writing that mixes a critical attitude with wit and humor in an effort to improve mankind and human institutions.

  8. Satire • While some writers and commentators use a serious tone to persuade their audiences to accept their perspective on various issues, some writers specifically use humor to convey a serious message.

  9. Satire

  10. Types of Direct Satire • Horatian satire is a type of direct satire which pokes fun at human foibles with a witty even indulgent tone. • Juvenalian satire is a type of direct satire which denounces, sometimes with invective, human vice and error in dignified and solemn tones.

  11. Horatian Satire • This type of satire is namedafter the Roman satirist Horace. • Satire in which the voice is indulgent, tolerant, amused, and witty.  The speaker holds up to gentle ridicule the absurdities and follies of human beings, aiming at producing in the reader not the anger of a Juvenal, but a wry smile.

  12. Horatian Satire

  13. Juvenalian Satire • This type of satire is named after the Roman satirist Juvenal. • It is harsher than Horatian satire because it often attacks and shows contempt for people. • Often, it seeks to address some evil in society through scorn and ridicule. • The Juvenalian satirist approaches his work in a more serious manner and uses dignified language to attack erroneous thinking or vice. • In this way Juvenalian satire evokes feelings of scorn, shock, and righteous indignation in the mind of the reader.

  14. Juvenalian Satire

  15. Indirect Satire • The genre of Menippean satire is a form of satire, usually in prose, which has a length and structure similar to a novel and is characterized by attacking mental attitudes instead of specific individuals. Other features found in Menippean satire are different forms of parody and mythological burlesque, a critique of the myths inherited from traditional culture, a rhapsodic nature, a fragmented narrative, the combination of many different targets, and the rapid moving between styles and points of view

  16. Menippean Satire

  17. Characteristics of Satiric Writing • The following slides describe the various characteristics that often appear in satiric writing. • As you read the literature in the remainder of this unit, your goal will be to identify and analyze these characteristics and their effect on the various texts.

  18. Irony • Irony is a mode of expression, through words (verbal irony) or events (irony of situation), conveying a reality different from and usually opposite to appearance or expectation. • The surprise recognition by the audience often produces a comic effect, making irony often funny.

  19. Irony • When a text intended to be ironic does not seen as such, the effect can be disastrous. • To be an effective piece of sustained irony, there must be some sort of audience tip-off, through style, tone, use of clear exaggeration, or other device.

  20. Irony

  21. At Walmart Store for Christmas

  22. Hyperbole • Hyperbole is deliberate exaggeration to achieve an effect; overstatement.

  23. Litotes • Litotes are a form of understatement that involves making an affirmative point by denying its opposite. • For Example: • “Being tortured with fire must have been somewhat uncomfortable.” • “Rap videos with dancers in them are not uncommon.“ • “There are a few Starbucks in America."

  24. Caricature • A caricature is an exaggeration or other distortion of an individual's prominent features or characteristics to the point of making that individual appear ridiculous. • The term is applied more often to graphic representations than to literary ones.

  25. Caricature

  26. Wit • Witis most commonly understood as clever expression, whether aggressive or harmless; that is, with or without derogatory intent toward someone or something in particular. • We also tend to think of wit as being characterized by a mocking or paradoxical quality, evoking laughter through apt phrasing.

  27. Wit • Witis most commonly understood as clever expression, whether aggressive or harmless; that is, with or without derogatory intent toward someone or something in particular. • We also tend to think of wit as being characterized by a mocking or paradoxical quality, evoking laughter through apt phrasing. • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Gv0H-vPoDc

  28. Wit

  29. Sarcasm • Sarcasmis intentional derision, generally directed at another person and intended to hurt. • The term comes from a Greek word meaning “to tear flesh like dogs” and signifies a cutting remark. • Sarcasm usually involves obvious, verbal irony, achieving its effect by jeeringly stating the opposite of what is meant so as to heighten the insult.

  30. Sarcasm

  31. Ridicule • Ridicule is the use of words intended to belittle a person or idea and arouse contemptuous laughter. • The goal is to condemn or criticize by making the thing, idea, or person seem laughable and ridiculous.

  32. Ridicule

  33. Parody • A parody is an imitation of an author or his/her work with the idea of ridiculing the author, his/her ideas, or the work itself. • A parodist exploits the peculiarities of an author’sexpression—the propensity to use too many parentheses, certain favorite words, or other elements of the author’s style.

  34. Parody • “Amish Paradise” Weird Al Yankovic • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOfZLb33uCg

  35. Invective • Invectiveis speech or writing that abuses, denounces, or attacks. It can be directed against a person, cause, idea, or system. • It employs a heavy use of negative emotive language. • For Example: “I cannot but conclude the bulk of your natives to be the most pernicious race of little odious vermin that nature ever suffered to crawl upon the surface of the earth.” (Swift, Gulliver’s Travels)

  36. Invective

  37. Bellringer • Watch the following video: • http://youtu.be/OSXNU1_bouc • As you watch, jot down all of the various characteristics of satire you see in the video. • Then, determine whether the video is Horatian or Juvenalian satire and write a sentence or two explaining why. • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p3POpUm9RHI Jon Stewart on Phil Richardson and First Amendment

  38. Utopian versus Dystopian • A technique often used in satirical novels is the contrast between utopian and dystopian societies. • The author usually introduces what at first appears to be a utopian society, but which the reader soon realizes is actually grotesque or dystopian.

  39. The Hunger Games as Satire • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P5lJ-6tWsUY • Note the parody. . . . • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDTY8iWP-aY

  40. Desensitization • http://www.scholastic.com/thehungergames/videos/desensitization.htm Have we become less sensitive as a result of the constant flow of images? How has social media contributed to this, or does it help us to remain more connected and sensitive? How does the story satirize this situation in our present world?

  41. Theseus and the Minotaur

  42. Prophetic??? Satirical??? • “Not only are we in the districts forced to remember the iron grip of the Capitol’s power each year, we are forced to celebrate it. And this year I am one of the stars of the show. I will have to travel from district to district to stand before cheering crowds who secretly loathe me, to look down into the faces of the families whose children I have killed. . .” (Katniss Everdeen, Catching Fire. 4)

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