The Social Satire in Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.69513/jnfh.v1.i1.a3Abstract
ABSTRACT
In Gulliver's Travels (1726) Swift presented different kinds of satire. These different kinds of satire divided the critics into groups with different points of view concerning the satirical tendencies in Gulliver's Travels. Swift concentrates on the inside of things rather than the outside; on actuality rather than illusion . It is important to note that Swift seized all the opportunities so as to direct his severe attack on different aspects of life. In Gulliver's Travels, there is emphasis laid on man's bad nature and his social role. His recognition of the defects in human nature leads him to depict human nature. Therefore, he presents the Yahoos as an embodiment of all the well-known human vices and follies. So, he ruthlessly satirizes bad elements in man's nature over which man has a full control. He believes that man is capable of keeping them under his control.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
COLLINS, John Churton, Jonathan Swift, A Biographical and Critical Study, London, Chatto and Windus, 1902
PREU, James A. The Dean and the Anarchist , New York, Haske ll House Publishers , LTD, 1972.
QUINTANA, Ricardo: Swift, An Introduction, London, O.U .P., 1966.
SWIFT, Jonathan, Gulliver's Travels, .((IV, 6, 1)ed. By Harold Williams, London, J.M. and Sons, L.T. 1970.
SWIFT's Sermon "On Mutual Subjection" in Jonathan SWIFT'', Irish Tracts (1720-1723) and His Sermons, ed. by H. DAVIS and L. LANDA pp. 142 ff.
SYMJNS, Arthur The Symbolist Movement in Literature, London,
Archibald Constable, Co. LTD., 1908.
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