Thursday, March 14, 2019

Satire in Jonathan Swifts Gullivers Travels :: Gullivers Travels

Satire in Gullivers Travels On the surface, Jonathan western fence lizards Gullivers Travels appears to be a travel log, made to chronicle the adventures of a man, Lemuel Gulliver, on the four most incredible voyages imaginable. Primarily, however, Gullivers Travels is a work of satire. Gulliver is neither a fully developed character nor even an altogether decided persona rather, he is a satiric device enabling speedy to score satirical points (Rodino 124). Indeed, whereas the work begins with more specific satire, attacking perhaps one political machine or aimed at one special custom in each instance, it finishes with the most savage onslaught on humanity ever written, satirizing the whole of the human condition. (Murry 3). In order to arrive this satire, Gulliver is taken on four adventures, driven by fate, a ready spirit, and the pen of Swift. Gullivers first journey takes him to the Land of Lilliput, where he finds himself a gargantuan among six inch tall beings. His ne xt journey brings him to Brobdingnag, where his situation is turn now he is the midget in a land of giants. His tertiary journey leads him to Laputa, the floating island, inhabited by strange (although similarly sized) beings who follow their whole culture from music and mathematics. Gullivers fourth and final journey places him in the land of the Houyhnhnm, a society of intelligent, reasoning horses. As Swift leads Gulliver on these four fantastical journeys, Gullivers perceptions of himself and the people and things around him change, giving Swift extensive opportunity to inject into the story both irony and satire of the England of his twenty-four hour period and of the human condition. Swift ties his satire closely with Gullivers perceptions and adventures. In Gullivers first adventure, he begins on a ship that runs aground on a submersed rock. He swims to land, and when he awakens, he finds himself tied down to the ground, and surrounded by tiny people, the Lilliputians. Irony is present from the start in the simultaneous enjoyment of Gulliver as giant and prisoner (Reilly 167). Gulliver is surprised at the intrepidity of these piffling mortals, who dare venture to mount and walk upon my body (I.i.16), but he admires this quality in them. Gulliver eventually learns their language, and arranges a contract with them for his freedom. However, he is stick out by this agreement to protect Lilliput from invasion by the people of Blefuscu.

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