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Irony. Feature Menu. Satire What Is Irony? Verbal Irony Situational Irony Dramatic Irony Review Practice. Satire. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Satire
What Is Irony?
Verbal Irony
Situational Irony
Dramatic Irony
Review
Practice
Irony
Feature Menu
Satire
In satire, an author ridicules the subject through the use of techniques such as exaggeration, reversal, incongruity, and/or parody in order to make a comment or criticism about it.
http://www.theage.com.au/ffximage/2006/07/28/tragedy_narrowweb__300x374,0.jpg
4 Techniques of Satire
Exaggeration: To enlarge, increase, or represent something beyond normal bounds so that it becomes ridiculous and its faults can be seen.
Incongruity: To present things that are out of place or are absurd in relation to their surroundings.
Reversal: To present the opposite of the normal order (e.g., the order of events, hierarchical order).
Parody: To imitate the techniques and/or style of some person, place, or thing.
Irony is the contrast between expectation and reality. Three kinds of irony are
What Is Irony?
• verbal irony
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• situational irony
• dramatic irony
Verbal Irony
In verbal irony, a speaker says one thing but means the opposite. Verbal irony
• can become sarcasm if taken to a harsh extreme
• is the simplest kind of irony
Verbal Irony
Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice begins with an excellent example of verbal irony.
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It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.
How might this opening sentence be an example of verbal irony?
Situational Irony
In situational irony, what actually happens is the opposite of what is expected or appropriate. Situational irony
• may mock human plans and intentions, which in real life often come to little
• is often humorous
Situational Irony
Read this sentence from Hanson W. Baldwin’s R.M.S. Titanic.
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. . . she was fresh from Harland and Wolff’s Belfast yards, strong in the strength of her forty-six thousand tons of steel, bent, hammered, shaped, and riveted through the three years of her slow birth.
Explain the situational irony in this ship sinking on its first voyage.
Dramatic Irony
Dramatic irony occurs when the reader or the audience knows something important that the character does not know. Dramatic irony
• heightens the sense of humor in comedies and deepens the sense of dread in tragedies
• adds greatly to the tension in stories, plays, and movies
Dramatic Irony
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When gods war with gods, they use weapons we do not know. It was fire falling out of the sky and a mist that poisoned. It was the time of the Great Burning and the Destruction. They ran about like ants in the streets of their city—poor gods, poor gods! Then the towers began to fall. A few escaped—yes, a few. The legends tell it. . . . I saw it happen, I saw the last of them die. It was darkness over the broken city and I wept.
In this passage from Stephen Vincent Benét’s “By the Water of Babylon,” the narrator describes the vision he has while exploring the ruins of New York City.
What do readers know that the narrator does not?
Identify each item as one of the following:
• verbal irony
• situational irony
• dramatic irony
Review
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The movie audience knows that a hostile alien is just past the door. “Don’t go in there!” one viewer yells at the screen.
The guest opens his mouthto compliment the chef, but before he can speak, he burps long and loudly.
Quick CheckAfter tripping over his own feet, the teen exclaims, “That was graceful!”
Invent an example of each kind of irony. Describe each example in a paragraph. Record your examples in a similar chart.
Practice
Verbal irony
Say one thing but mean the opposite
Example:
Situational irony
What happens is the opposite of what is expected
Example:
Dramatic irony
We know something a character does not know
Example:
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