Proposal

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    After reading the work of Jonathan Swift "A Modest Proposal" I could not help feeling sorry for the people who live in these conditions. The farmers who have to meditate for food and children who cannot defend themselves and only suffer from hunger and poverty. It is inevitable to think of solutions that help to hunger, anguish, and poverty. Therefore, Swift poses a solution full of satire, black humor and a bit of mockery about the depressing situation of these families and the society in…

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    A Modest Proposal was written by Jonathan Swift and published as a pamphlet in 1729. The proposal was submitted anonymously by Jonathan in an attempt to find a quick and simple solution to the poverty in Ireland. The author uses a number of rhetorical devise to appeal a rational and or emotional response of the audience. Right from the start of the proposal looking at the title, the author is using irony to introduce his proposal being hardly a “Modest Proposal”. The intended audiences were…

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    writer, Jonathan Swift, wrote many pieces in response to other works of literature. During the enlightenment period, Swift wrote an essay titled “A Modest Proposal” as a response to enlightened thinkers. Jonathan Swift took the enlightened, everything should have reasoning, way of thinking and wrote a work of satire resulting in “A Modest Proposal.” The setting was in Ireland where areas were overpopulating and women could not afford to care for their children, which resulted in the women…

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    “A Modest Proposal” V. “Lifeboat Ethics” Distributing limited resources among our rapidly growing economy has always been a cause for concern. There are new lives being brought into this world everyday even though our resources are dwindling down as we speak. In “A Modest Proposal” by Jonathan Swift and “Lifeboat Ethics” by Garrett Hardin, each author uses a different method of appeals to propose to their readers a way to help our ever growing population. Hardin uses more of a logic based…

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    Jonathan Swift was an Anglo-Irish satirist and essayist who lived from 1667-1745. Born in Dublin, he was part of the privileged social class in Ireland. Ireland was at the time ruled by England. The Stuarts had established a Protestant governing aristocracy amid the country's relatively poor Catholic population. Swift would shuffle back and forth between positions in England and Ireland. In doing this, he became increasingly embroiled in English politics. England’s policies towards Ireland were…

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    In A Modest Proposal, written in 1729, Swift describes the social conditions in Ireland. He explains that the inhabitants of this country are suffering from an increase in poverty, while the English benefit from their profit. Therefore, this brings economic complications to the Irish. One of the most noticeable problems the author perceives in society is the significant growth of beggars living in the streets. Nevertheless, he highlights, the real issue is that children are living in those poor…

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    Jonathan Swift, author of “A Modest Proposal,” tries to present different ideas in order to change the situation of Ireland. Through his proposal, he is able to get his point across. He wrote this essay to show how undeveloped and bad the state of Ireland is and the social classes. Throughout the essay he tries to make the readers to accept his idea of selling kids for food, all the while mentions some facts he think it is right. The idea is trying to make children of Ireland into useful members…

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    during the year of 1729 is highly apparent when reading “A Modest Proposal” by Dr. Jonathan Swift. From reading this proposal, it is initially alarming how the author states that his solution to Ireland’s significant issue of poverty would be to murder and sell children to rich, Ireland inhabitants who would “give ten shillings for the carcass of a good fat child” (Swift 7-8). This shocking solution would astound anyone reading the proposal for the first time who did not grasp that this work of…

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    have yet not found a solution to this complex problem. The genius of Swift in this essay is to propose the most radical proposal possible (Ironically the essay is titled as “Modest”), to eat these unwanted children.…

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    uneducated, impoverished youths floating aimlessly around the inner city, left to fend for themselves by the Irish state. In relating to such, it is still incomprehensible that one of the greatest pieces of satire ever composed, Jonathan Swift’s ‘A Modest Proposal’ is still as relevant today in society as it was 285 years ago. Written in 1729, in an era of Irish history where Protestant absentee landlords ruled the roost, and Roman Catholic peasants left to starve at their hands, it is a…

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