A Modest Proposal Rhetorical Devices

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Dead Babies… What? Being a cannibal and eating one’s children would usually be frowned upon by most moral-driven groups in developed countries, but in A Modest Proposal the narrator makes such an act a solution to a very pressing problem. This satiric piece not only finds many, if not all, of its inspiration from the impoverished state of Ireland in the early mid 1700’s, but deduces an idea of utilizing the otherwise useless beggar youth as an agricultural and economic commodity. While the reader may be seduced into horror by the ideas presented by Jonathan Swift, the fact remains that there are many underlying, as well as apparent, themes within the text. Whether it is the reader’s role in the essay, cannibalism, sympathy, politics, religion, or …show more content…

To put things into perspective, famine and poverty made huge impacts on Irish society which would’ve made the respective audience either well-off considering the circumstances, or one of the “beggars of the female sex, followed by three, four, or six children,” (Swift 2633). With this said, authors such as Robert Phiddian claim that “the reader is caught between two authorial voices in the text, that of the Proposer's and that of Swift's, and whichever way he turns, he has to confront the truth that there are those who devour and there are those who are devoured” (1). Irish society would have either placed readers of the essay under those who were able to raise a child comfortably, inevitably placing them in the class where the consumption of said children would have been the proposed norm, or as those who had to sell their human kin for consumption in the Irish market. The lack of room for escape from being placed in either category forces the reader to essentially come to terms with either idea in the midst of their initial shock and discourse at eating babies and

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