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Elements of Satire

Elements of Satire. A literary genre that uses irony, wit and sarcasm to expose humanity’s vices and failings, with the goal of inspiring change. Types of Satire. Horatian . Juvenalian. Pokes fun at human folly Tone is Witty Gentle Indulgent. Denounces human vice and error harshly

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Elements of Satire

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  1. Elements of Satire A literary genre that uses irony, wit and sarcasm to expose humanity’s vices and failings, with the goal of inspiring change.

  2. Types of Satire Horatian Juvenalian • Pokes fun at human folly • Tone is • Witty • Gentle • Indulgent • Denounces human vice and error harshly • Tone is • Serious • Solemn • Dignified

  3. Important Vocabulary • Caricature • Hyperbole • Understatement/ Litotes • Persona • Parody • Irony • Sarcasm • Wit • Invective • Ridicule

  4. Caricature Exaggeration • To enlarge, increase, or represent something beyond normal bounds so that it becomes ridiculous and its faults can be seen. • Often relies on Hyperbole or Understatement • Understatement is sometimes called LITOTES

  5. What is Exaggerated?What Faults are evident?What is the “message” of this caricature?

  6. What Type of Satire is this? Horatian Juvenalian

  7. Caricature is Different from Character • Character—is a person in a story • It is developed through appearance, personality, behaviors and reactions of other characters • Caricature—is the exaggeration of a character so that character appears ridiculous • It is developed by taking ONE part of the appearance, personality, or behavior and exaggerating it.

  8. So How Does An Author Create Satire? • By adopting a PERSONA • A voice or mask that an author, speaker, or performer assumes for a particular purpose. Let’s Hear it for the Cheerleaders! p. 227

  9. What would you exaggerate? • Pick a famous person • Athlete • Television/Movie Star • Musician/Artist • Politician • What is their most notable characteristic? • What message do you want to send about them?

  10. Let’s See your Caricatures! DO NOW

  11. Parody • a feeble or ridiculous imitation • Uses elements of caricature, but adds in Wit & Sarcasm

  12. What Did this piece copy?How did they change it?What message does that change send? • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=811Llm99M88

  13. Your Task • Read the original poem and the parody • Decide how the second poem changes the original • What message is the second poem sending? • Be Prepared to Report Out

  14. Create your own Parody of: This Is Just To Say By William Carlos Williams Variations on a Theme By Kenneth Koch I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which you were probably saving for breakfast Forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold I chopped down the house that you had been saving to live in next summer. I am sorry, But it was morning, And I had nothing to do And its wooden Beams were So inviting Example

  15. Let’s Hear your Parodies! DO NOW

  16. Practice Test!

  17. Chalk Talk: What Do you remember about Irony? DO NOW

  18. Irony • Verbal: •  statements that imply a meaning in opposition to their literal meaning. • “Please go crash my car.” • "The day was as normal as a group of seals with wings riding around on unicycles, assuming that you lived someplace where that was very normal.“ • Can you think of more?

  19. Irony • Situational: • To present things that are out of place or are absurd in relation to its surroundings---INCONGRUITY • Twitter • To use reversal to present the opposite of the normal order or what you expect to happen--REVERSAL • YOLO

  20. Irony • Dramatic Irony: • When the audience knows something the character does not. • What do we know here? Geico Commerical

  21. Time to Test what we know! • Use your white boards to identify the type of Irony shown: • http://www.teachertube.com/viewVideo.php?video_id=247074

  22. Is Irony always Satire? • No. • To make it SATIRE, it must have a point—or message. • So what was the point of Twitler? • So what was the point of YOLO? • So what was the point of Geico?

  23. Irony In Literature • Can be serious or funny • Oedipus Rex Girl Moved to Tears by Of Mice and Men Cliff Notes p. 233

  24. Rhetorical Analysis You will have 45 minutes to write a rhetorical analysis of Mark Twain’s Advice to Youth (1882).

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