SATIRIE

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/10/2019 SATIRIE

    1/1

    Literary Devices SATIRE1. Humor:

    Exaggeration or overstatement: Something that does happen, but is exaggerated to absurd lengths.This is the most common type of satire. For example, a caricature, the formalized walk of CharlieChaplin.

    Understatement: A statement that seems incomplete or less than truthful given the facts. Thinksarcasm with the intentions of evoking change. For example, Fieldings description of a grossly fatand repulsively ugly Mrs. Slipslop: She was not remarkably handsome.

    Incongruity: A marked lack of correspondence or agreement. Surprise: Twist endings, unexpected events

    2. Sarcasm: A sharply mocking or contemptuous remark. The term came from the Greek word sarkazeinwhich means to tear flesh.

    Sarcasm is one kind of irony; it is praise which is really an insult; sarcasm generally invovles malice, the desireto put someone down, e.g., "This is my brilliant son, who failed out of college."

    3. Irony: Literary device conveying the opposite of what is expected; in which there is an incongruity ordiscordance between what one says or does, and what one means or what is generally understood. It islighter, less harsh in wording than sarcasm, though more cutting because of its indirectness.The ability to recognize irony is one of the surest tests of intelligence and sophistication. Irony speaks wordsof praise to imply blame and words of blame to imply praise. Writer is using a tongue-in-cheek style. Ironyis achieved through such techniques as hyperbole and understatement. Verbal Irony: Simply an inversion of meaning Dramatic Irony: When the words or acts of a character carry a meaning unperceived by himself but

    understood by the audience. The irony resides in the contrast between the meaning intended by thespeaker and the added significance seen by others.

    Situational Irony: Depends on a discrepancy between purpose and results. Example: a practical joke

    that backfires is situational irony.

    Irony is often confused with sarcasm and satire:

    Satire is the exposure of the vices or follies of an individual, a group, an institution, an idea, a society, etc.,usually with a view to correcting it. Satirists frequently use irony.

    Characteristics of Satire Satire at its heart is concerned with ethical reform. It attacks those institutions or individuals the satirist

    deems corrupt. It works to make vice laughable and/or reprehensible and thus bring social pressure on those who still

    engage in wrongdoing. It seeks a reform in public behavior, a shoring up of its audience's standards, or at the very least a wake-upcall in an otherwise corrupt culture.

    Satire is often implicit and assumes readers who can pick up on its moral clues. It is not a sermon. Satire in general attacks types -- the fool, the boor, the adulterer, the proud -- rather than specific persons. If it does attack some by name, rather than hoping to reform these persons, it seeks to warn the public

    against approving of them. Satire is witty, ironic, and often exaggerated. It uses extremes to bring its audience to a renewed awareness

    of its ethical and spiritual danger. Sometime if the satirist is in danger for his or her attack, ambiguity, innuendo and understatement can be

    used to help protect its author.