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  1. Satire is the use of humor, irony, sarcasm, or ridicule to criticize something or someone. Public figures, such as politicians, are often the subject of satire, but satirists can take aim at other targets as well—from societal conventions to government policies. Satire is an entertaining form of social commentary, and it occurs in many forms ...

  2. Nov 1, 2013 · Satire is traditionally thought of as a literary mode with a moral purpose; the satirist writes “with a sense of moral vocation and with a concern for the public interest.” 1 It is clear that satires often address the same sorts of particular moral problems that papers in applied ethics do; for example, Jonathan Swift's A Modest Proposal addressed English attitudes toward Irish poverty in ...

    • Nicholas Diehl
    • 2013
  3. What sharpens the effect is the metrical form of (page 18) p. 18 Horace’s satire, the dactylic hexameter, which was the signature metre of the very highest Greco-Roman literary form, epic poetry. Those last four lines of 1.7, without ever being unmetrical, flout all the unwritten rules of respectable poetry, the verses broken up between sense units, the line cadence disrupted, ugly ...

  4. Definition of Satire. Satire is a literary device for the artful ridicule of folly or vice as a means of exposing or correcting it. The subject of satire is generally human frailty, as it manifests in people’s behavior or ideas as well as societal institutions or other creations. Satire utilizes tones of amusement, contempt, scorn, or ...

  5. port satire. ii The reluctance of literary scholars to account for the relationship of satire and moral philosophy may well stem from the broader reluctance to pro-vide a robust, necessary-and-sufficient-conditions sort of definition of satire - and perhaps this reluc-tance is a wise course after all. The very etymology

  6. Satire, then, is a literary technique used to correct problems in the behavior of people and institutions as perceived by the satirist. In general, Horatian satire, which characterizes much satire ...

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  8. Satire is meant to critique people, power, and society in an entertaining way. Satirists set out to expose the flaws in current systems or ways of thinking in hopes of informing, educating, and improving humanity. Humor is a central component of many satires, but comedy is not the sole purpose of the satire.

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