A Modest Proposal Rhetorical Analysis

682 Words2 Pages

A Modest Proposal was written in 1729 by Jonathan Swift, an Irish-born writer. He used his writing to criticize what he thought was irrational and unjust. During the 1500s, England's Protestant rulers began to dominate Ireland. In the 1700s, when the essay was written, Ireland’s Catholics were being heavily taxed and oppressed by the English Protestant rule. Because of this, Ireland became impoverished and subservient to benefit Britain. Swift’s intended audience was people who could enact change in others to ease the problems in Ireland at the time. In his essay, Swift criticizes the English government and the wealthy for creating poverty in Ireland. He uses verbal irony when he proposes that saving infants to be sold for food is the way to resolve the growing problem of the impoverished. By developing this idea and implying that the English will not mind if the Irish use children for food, Swift suggests that the English government is callous and cruel. Swift combines a logical structure with verbal irony to create a shocking satire that highlights the need for real solutions to the poverty problem in Ireland. …show more content…

He follows the standard dry argument essay format to lull his readers into thinking that his argument is nothing out of the ordinary. It is full of formal vocabulary that makes the reader glaze over what he is saying like they would any argument. He identifies the plight of the impoverished, and proposes they use the poor children for food. He says this will eliminate poverty, strengthen the economy, and relieve the stress of families. Swift acknowledges and dismisses alternatives, which results in the typical argument essay format. However, it is the juxtaposition of formal structure and “grisly” substance that creates the irony that forces the readers to look past the

Open Document