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Gulliver’s Travels

Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

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Page 1: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

Gulliver’s Travels

Page 2: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

satire

a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it.

Page 3: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

Elements of Satire

• Must attack an institution (government, politics, religion, education ect)

• Must be humorous

• Must use responsibility (in other words it cannot outwardly mock anything that could damage the writer’s reputation or ruin the fabric of society)

Page 4: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

• There must be a clear target (it cannot be obvious though)

• Formal Language (if it does not have this it becomes slap stick comedy)

• Becomes like a private joke– it involves sophistication and everyone may not get it

Page 5: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

• Usually uses irony and wit

• Usually uses a common medium: could be a poem, debate, news report, short story etc.

• A good satire should make the reader/watcher think

Page 6: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

• Satire’s purpose is to bring about change!

• This makes it different from a Parody which simply makes fun of an individual or institution for comic effect

• Satire usually asks us to see what is around us and consider it.

Page 7: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

Satire in Gulliver’s travels

• Big Endians and Small Endians– This refers to the argument with the country across

the sea as to which side of the egg to break– This is a reference to the warring between France and

England over land and religion. Remember both are Christian countries, but one is Catholic and the other Protestant.

– The reference to the Emperor cutting his finger as he broke the egg, is an allusion to King Henry VIII (remember the King with all the wives, father of Queen Elizabeth) who created the Church of England and “broke” the Catholic hold on England.

Page 8: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

Emperor of Lilliput

• The Emperor is actually a satire of King George I.

• He is the ruler that succeeds the throne after Queen Anne and is ruling when Swift writes the novel.

• King George was actually German and gains the throne through marriage.

Page 9: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

Satire in Gulliver’s travels

• The High Heels and the Low Heels– This refers to the political parties in England at the time

Swift is writing. The High Heels are the Tories (remember this party believes in the power of the King and the church)and the Low Heels are the Whigs (the party that believes in having a parliament that checks the power of the king).

– The Emperor at one point favors the Low Heels and wears them himself.

– Eventually the Emperor wears one low and one high heal. This is a direct correlation to King George’s attempt to appears as not to favor one party over another.

Page 10: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

Elections in Gulliver’s Travels

• In Gulliver’s Travel’s, Gulliver witnesses a strange ribbon dance that is used to choose the next elected officials in Lilliput.

• Swift is commenting on the absurdity of English elections. While the people could choose who would represent them in Parliament, the King could buy votes of both the people and parliament by promising Cabinet positions, land and titles. In other words, the elections did not represent the will of the people but rather their greed and are as absurd as choosing a government based on their ability to dance.

Page 11: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

Gulliver’s Travels

• Published in 1726 anonymously

• Can be read on 2 levels:

• An entertaining and inventive fantasy

• A satire that rises to deep moral indignation against what Swift refers to as “the animal called man”

Page 12: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

• Narrator is Lemuel Gulliver, a well-meaning but not very bright Englishman who describes whatever he sees with simple innocence.

• A gull is a term for someone easily fooled or gullible

• it is up to the reader to see the truths that Gulliver misses

Page 13: Gulliver’s Travels. satire a literary work that makes fun of a subject by ridiculing and demeaning it

Use of Satire

• “ A Voyage to Lilliput”: the English politicians and court are made ridiculous by being reduced to scale.

• “ A Voyage to Brobdingnag”: the immorality and cruelty of English society

• “Voyage to Laputa”: showy displays of learning• Houyhnhnms: intelligent and noble horses

govern the yahoos, a breed of filthy, brutish humans