Animal Farm And A Modest Proposal Essay

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At the point when civilization claims responsibility of humanity’s negligence, satire will become dispensable. “A sudden imbalance in diction triggers a sense of confusion as the reader struggles to place familiar words within an unusual context.” (White). Specifically, in Animal Farm by George Orwell, and A Modest Proposal by Jonathon Swift, these works of literature exploit the conventions of dramatic irony to encourage a degree of social change. The authors expose injustice by mocking the very thing they wish to criticize, thus the reader is able to realize the absurdity of the current political state.
Dramatic irony: “The quality exhibited in words spoken by a character in a play or narrative who, because of his ignorance of present …show more content…

He advocates cannibalism of children as a means to counter the poverty and famine occurring in the Irish population. His ideas incorporate dramatic irony as the reader understands that the essay is satire, however the prose in which it is written indicates otherwise. The narrator mentions “the poorer tenant will have something valuable of their own, which by law may be made liable to a distress, and help to pay their landlord’s rent, their corn and cattle being already seized, and money a thing unknown”, which will solve the issue of poverty among tenants (Swift 2). Although, many may object to this form of resolution, unless a change is aroused, this proposal, while cruel, seems logical. Provided the narrator has contemplated all possible objections, he “can think of no one objection, that will possibly be raised against this proposal, unless it should be urged, that the number of people will be thereby much lessened in the kingdom” (Swift 3). The narrator blatantly states that this proposal should arouse no objections, which insinuates that of the previous proposals stated to fix Ireland, the cannibalism of children is the best. Although cruel, the narrator suggest that it should outrank any other previous proposal made, which ignites recognition in the reader that the time period in which it was written desperately required

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