Contemporary British satire and the problem of Jonathan Swift’s personae

This essay brings the example of Jonathan Swift’s literary personae to bear on current trends in satirical culture. A number of recent commentators have written of a crisis in contemporary British satire. They invoke Horkheimer and Adorno’s theory that comedy supports power interests which it purpo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: John Stubbs
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculy of Arts) 2020-06-01
Series:Ars & Humanitas
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/arshumanitas/article/view/9358
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spelling doaj-d22f5937292d4a08a5229c03f59363eb2021-04-02T12:58:48ZdeuZnanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculy of Arts)Ars & Humanitas1854-96322350-42182020-06-0114110.4312/ars.14.1.27-40Contemporary British satire and the problem of Jonathan Swift’s personaeJohn Stubbs0University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Arts, Slovenia This essay brings the example of Jonathan Swift’s literary personae to bear on current trends in satirical culture. A number of recent commentators have written of a crisis in contemporary British satire. They invoke Horkheimer and Adorno’s theory that comedy supports power interests which it purportedly undermines. The present essay maintains that Swift in a sense confirms this theory, but also that he sets another, more exacting standard for satire. Swiftian satire is singular if not unique in that it is openly self-disabling: in its highest form it deploys a persona that exhausts the resources of contemporary and classical theory. In doing so, it confronts its audiences with a complex and engaged expression of political helplessness. But it also uses irony to tell the truth. The standard Swift sets contemporary satire is an exacting one: to deliver an unflinching and, if necessary, vindictive testimony against injustice. https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/arshumanitas/article/view/9358satirerhetoricpersonaSwiftQuintilianBoris Johnson
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Stubbs
spellingShingle John Stubbs
Contemporary British satire and the problem of Jonathan Swift’s personae
Ars & Humanitas
satire
rhetoric
persona
Swift
Quintilian
Boris Johnson
author_facet John Stubbs
author_sort John Stubbs
title Contemporary British satire and the problem of Jonathan Swift’s personae
title_short Contemporary British satire and the problem of Jonathan Swift’s personae
title_full Contemporary British satire and the problem of Jonathan Swift’s personae
title_fullStr Contemporary British satire and the problem of Jonathan Swift’s personae
title_full_unstemmed Contemporary British satire and the problem of Jonathan Swift’s personae
title_sort contemporary british satire and the problem of jonathan swift’s personae
publisher Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculy of Arts)
series Ars & Humanitas
issn 1854-9632
2350-4218
publishDate 2020-06-01
description This essay brings the example of Jonathan Swift’s literary personae to bear on current trends in satirical culture. A number of recent commentators have written of a crisis in contemporary British satire. They invoke Horkheimer and Adorno’s theory that comedy supports power interests which it purportedly undermines. The present essay maintains that Swift in a sense confirms this theory, but also that he sets another, more exacting standard for satire. Swiftian satire is singular if not unique in that it is openly self-disabling: in its highest form it deploys a persona that exhausts the resources of contemporary and classical theory. In doing so, it confronts its audiences with a complex and engaged expression of political helplessness. But it also uses irony to tell the truth. The standard Swift sets contemporary satire is an exacting one: to deliver an unflinching and, if necessary, vindictive testimony against injustice.
topic satire
rhetoric
persona
Swift
Quintilian
Boris Johnson
url https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/arshumanitas/article/view/9358
work_keys_str_mv AT johnstubbs contemporarybritishsatireandtheproblemofjonathanswiftspersonae
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