Successful by Experience: A Modest Proposal

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Can one truly account of an experience they have not been through? For example, every time the news is on, a reporter is interviewing a victim of a tragic event. Why does the news channel not air a civilian who has only heard stories about the event? This applies to authors of political writing. If the writers had not actually gone through what they reported, ethos would not be equally served. Personal experience is one the most important factors in establishing relationships between the speaker, text, and reader in a political writing.
Jonathan Swift published “A Modest Proposal” when years of drought led to a crop failure in Ireland causing thousands to starve to death. This tragedy was blatantly ignored by the English. Swift, being raised in Ireland and then moving to England, felt an extreme subjectiveness toward the event. In “A Modest Proposal” he writes of a radically satiric solution to the political disaster. He also talks of the grotesque sights seen in Ireland due to starvation. In part of his conclusion he states, “Therefore I repeat, let no man talk to me of these and the like expedients, till he has at least some glimpse of hope that there will be ever some hearty and sincere attempt to put them in practice”(Swift 400). This is one of Swift’s last desperate pleas for help. He is saying that if no one else plans to take action, then they should not shoot down his twisted, yet practicable solution. Jonathan Swift gained the attention of many outraged English. Although the English were disgusted and appalled, the attention succeeded in creating a connection to Irish. A writer would not have been as successful if he was not as despondent as Swift. Jonathan Swift made a courageous move in being so shocking. The civic wo...

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...s bond to the people watching at home. The viewers want to see and feel the emotion from the account, not just hear about it. It is the same with the reader of a political writing. Civic works are noteworthy for their ethical appeal. Without that significant personal touch, nothing deems them intriguing and worth the read. In a piece of political writing, one can not truly account of an experience they have not been through.

Works Cited

Lincoln, Abraham. "The Gettysburg Address" 50 Essays: A Portable Anthology. Samuel Cohen. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2004. 203-204. Print.
King Jr., Martin Luther. "Letter from Birmingham Jail" 50 Essays: A Portable Anthology. Samuel Cohen. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2004. 172-189. Print.
Swift, Jonathan "A Modest Proposal" 50 Essays: A Portable Anthology. Samuel Cohen. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2004. 393-401. Print.

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