TYPES OF SATIRE
There are two types of satire.
- Horatian:
Horatian satire is tolerant, funny, sophisticated witty,
wise, self-effacing and aims to correct through humour. Named for the Roman
satirist from the Augustan period in Rome, Horace, playfully criticizes
some social vice through gentle, mild, and light-hearted humour. It directs
wit, exaggeration, and self-deprecating humour toward what it identifies as
folly, rather than evil. Horatian satire's sympathetic tone is common in modern
society.
- Juvenalian:
Juvenalian satire is angry,
caustic, personal, relentless, bitter, and serious. Named after Augustan
period’s Roman satirist Juvenal, this type of satire is more contemptuous and
abrasive than the Horatian. Juvenalian satire provokes a darker kind of laughter;
addresses social evil and points with contempt to the corruption of men and
institutions through scorn, outrage, and savage ridicule. This form is often
pessimistic, characterized by irony, sarcasm, moral indignation and personal
invective, with less emphasis on humour.
SATIRICAL
DEVICES
1. 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 Charlie Chaplin.
- Understatement: A
statement that seems incomplete or less than truthful given the facts.
Think sarcasm with the intention of evoking change. For example,
Fielding’s description of a grossly fat and repulsively ugly Mrs
Slipslop: “She was not remarkably handsome.”
- Incongruity: A marked
lack of correspondence or agreement.
- Deflation: the
English professor mispronounces a word, the President slips and bangs his
head leaving the helicopter, etc.
- Linguistic games
/ Malapropism: A
deliberate mispronunciation of a name or term with the intent of poking
fun; weird rhymes, etc.
- Surprise: Twist
endings, unexpected events
2. Irony: Literary
device conveying the opposite of what is expected; in which there is an
incongruity or discordance between what one says or does, and what one means or
what is generally understood. It is lighter, less harsh in wording than
sarcasm, though more cutting because of its indirectness. For example, Marge
reading “Fretful Mother” as she ignores her child.
The ability to recognize irony is one of the surest tests of intelligence and
sophistication. Irony speaks words of praise to imply blame and words of blame
to imply praise. The writer is using a tongue-in-cheek style. The irony is 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 the speaker and the added significance seen by others.
- Socratic Irony: Socrates
pretended ignorance of a subject in order to draw knowledge out of his
students by a question-and-answer device. Socratic irony is feigning
ignorance to achieve some advantage over an opponent.
- Situational
Irony: Depends
on a discrepancy between purpose and results. For example: a practical joke
that backfires is situational irony.
3. Invective: Name-calling, harsh, abusive language directed against a person or cause. Invective
is a vehicle, a tool of anger. It is the bitterest of all satire.
4. Mock Encomium: Praise which is only apparent and which suggests
blame instead.
5. Grotesque: Creating tension between laughter and horror or
revulsion; the essence of all “sick humor: or “black humor”
6. Comic Juxtaposition: Linking together with no commentary items
which normally do not go together; Pope’s line in Rape of the Lock: “Puffs,
patches, bibles, and billet-doux”.
7. Mock Epic / Mock Heroic: Using elevated diction and devices from
the epic or the heroic to deal with low or trivial subjects.
8. Parody: A mocking imitation, composition imitating or burlesquing
another, usually serious, piece of work. Designed to ridicule in nonsensical
fashion an original piece of work. Parody is in literature what the caricature
and cartoon are in art.
9. Inflation: Taking a real-life situation and blowing it out of
proportion to make it ridiculous and showcase its faults.
10. Diminution: Taking a real-life situation and reducing it to make
it ridiculous and showcase its faults.
11. Absurdity: Something that seems like it would never happen but
could.
12. Wit or wordplay: The title The Importance of Being Earnest. It
is a play on the word “earnest”, meaning honest, and the name “Earnest”.
13. Euphemism: The substitution of an inoffensive term for one that
is offensive.
14. 1Travesty: Presents a serious (often religious) subject
frivolously it reduces everything to its lowest level. “Trans”= over, across
“vestire” = to clothe or dress. Presenting a subject in a dress intended for
another type of subject.
15. Burlesque: Ridiculous exaggeration achieved in a variety
of ways. For example, the sublime may be absurd, honest emotions may be turned
to sentimentality. STYLE is the essential quality in burlesque. A style
ordinarily dignified may be used for nonsensical matters, etc.
16. Farce: Exciting laughter through exaggerated, improbable
situations. This usually contains low comedy: quarrelling, fighting, coarse
with, horseplay, noisy singing, boisterous conduct, trickery, clownishness,
drunkenness, slapstick.
17. Sarcasm: A sharply mocking or contemptuous remark. The term
came from the Greek word “sarkazein” which means “to tear flesh.”
18. Knaves & Fools: In comedy, there are no villains and no
innocent victims. Instead, there are rogues (knaves) and suckers (fools). The
knave exploits someone “asking for it”. When these two interact, comic satire
results. When knaves & fools meet, they expose each other.
__________________
The Me you have always known, the Me that's a stranger still.
Sources: http://www.cssforum.com.pk/css-optional-subjects/group-v/english-literature/34302-satire-its-styles-types-devices.html
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