Title: SATIRE
1SATIRE
- The First Amendment Guarantees Our Right to Satire
2Satire
- Satire is a literary or artistic work that
ridicules its subject through the use of
techniques such as exaggeration, reversal,
incongruity, and/or parody in order to make a
comment or criticism.
3Characteristics of Satire
- Criticism! It must contain either general
criticism of humanity / human nature or specific
criticism of an individual or group. Satire is
concerned with ethical reform. - It works to make vice laughable and/or
reprehensible and thus bring social pressure on
those who still engage in wrongdoing. - It seeks a reform in public behavior, a shoring
up of its audience's standards, or at the very
least a wake-up call in an otherwise corrupt
culture. - Satire is often implicit and assumes readers can
pick up on its moral clues.
4Characteristics of Satire
- Satire usually attacks types or stereotypes --
the fool, the boor, the adulterer, the proud --
rather than specific persons. - If it does attack some by name, rather than
hoping to reform these persons, it seeks to warn
the public against approving of them. - Satire uses humor. It is witty, ironic, and often
exaggerated. - Some kind of moral voice simply mocking or
criticizing is not satire. - Teenage Affluenza http//www.youtube.com/watch?vK
FZz6ICzpjI
5Techniques of Satire Exaggeration
- to enlarge, increase, or represent something
beyond normal bounds so that it becomes
ridiculous, and its faults can be seen. - the portrayal of something trivial or unimportant
as very important, usually to emphasize its
triviality
6Techniques of Satire - Incongruity
- to present things that are out of place or are
absurd in relation to its surroundings - can also relate to humor that sets up a person to
expect one type of outcome, and is surprised by a
completely different outcome - Cartoons without captions often rely on
incongruity (visual puns) to be humorous.
7Techniques of Satire - Reversal
- to present the opposite of the normal order (the
order of events, hierarchical order, gender
roles) - or to present the opposite of what the author
actually wants to happen in order to make a point
8Techniques of Satire - Parody
- To imitate the techniques and/or style of some
person, place, or thing. - Not Another Teen Movie
- Austin Powers
- Monty Python
- Scary Movie
9What is the Difference between Parody and Satire?
- Parody is a literary or artistic work that
imitates the characteristic style of another work
itself, the subject of the work, or the author of
the work in order to ridicule, ironically comment
on, or poke some affectionate fun at. - It is a type of satire.
- Satire is a literary or artistic work in which
human vice or folly is attacked through irony,
derision, or wit.
10Satire in the MoviesShrek
- Find an example of
- Exaggeration
- Incongruity
- Reversal
- Parody
11Parody in Television Music
- Television
- Saturday Night Live
- MadTV
- Music
- Beautiful by James Blunt)
- (My Cubicle by Jym Britton)
- Youre Pitiful by Weird Al Yankovich)
12Satire in Music
- Dont Download This Song
- "Weird Al" Yankovic
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vqscadsLdvV0feature
related
13Parody in Fine Art
14Satire in Literature
- Harrison Bergeron
- by Kurt Vonnegut
- Read the short story
- Answer the questions
- completely
- Write the essay
- Give examples from
- the story
15Satire in Literature Harrison Bergeron
by Kurt Vonnegut Harrison Bergeron is a
political and social criticism of America. The
political system depicted in Vonneguts story is
distinctly American and founded on the principles
of egalitarianism, which holds that people should
be equal in every way. Equality is a beloved
principle enshrined in Americas constitution in
the phrase All men are created equal, but
Vonnegut suggests that the ideals of
egalitarianism can be dangerous if they are
interpreted too literally. If the goal of
equality is taken to its logical conclusion, we
may decide that people must be forced to be equal
to one another in their appearance, behavior, and
achievements.
http//www.amazon.com/2081-based-Vonneguts-22Harri
son-Bergeron-22/dp/B002Y2BDEE
16Parody in Advertising
- Dove Campaign for Real Beauty
- Dove Ad (http//www.youtube.com/watch?viYhCn0jf46
U) - and the parody
- Slob Evolution (http//www.youtube.com/watch?NR1
v7-kSZsvBY-Afeatureendscreen)
17Satire in Cartoons
- First, look at the satirical details.
- Characters clothing, race, features, sex
- Setting time of day, location, season,
signs/posters - Dialogue what is being said versus what is being
implied/tone of voice - Second, try to determine the social comment the
artist is trying to make.
181
192
203
214
225
236
247
258
269
2710
28Satirical Advertisements
1
29Satirical Advertisements
2
30Satirical Advertisements
3
31Satirical Advertisements
4
32Satirical Advertisements
5
33Satirical Advertisements
6
34Satirical Advertisements
7
35Satirical Advertisements
8
36Satirical Advertisements
9
37Satirical Advertisements
10