TỔNG HỢP HƠN 100 ĐỀ THI THỬ TỐT NGHIỆP THPT TOÁN 2024 - TỪ CÁC TRƯỜNG, TRƯỜNG...
a_modest_proposal___satire_introduction.ppt
1. • What are some things that bother you
or you would like to see changed?
• What is SATIRE? What have you done
with satire in your educational career?
Outside of school?
• What does Ethos, Pathos, and Logos
mean?
Discuss in your groups:
2. • Take out your homework from last
night. On the back board, put up an
example of “Task Two” from either
Ethos, Pathos, or Logos. Label your
example (L1) (P3) (E2) etc.
Please Do Now 4/20
3. • Take out your homework from last
night.
• In your groups, refresh on what we’ve
read so far.
Please Do Now 4/21
4. • Finish Part 1 Questions for tomorrow
• Text online
Homework 4/20
5. • Finish Part 2 Questions for tomorrow
• Text online
Homework 4/21
6. • Take out your homework from last
night. (part 2)
• In your groups, refresh on what we’ve
read so far the end of the satirical
piece.
Please Do Now 4/2
7. • Wealth and equality
• Debt
• Poverty
• Lack of regulation on
Wall Street
• Cost of higher education
• Discrimination
• Ungratefulness
• People who are fake
Our Issues
The fact that nothing is being done
about…
• Immigration
• ISIS
• Political Candidates
• Politics
• Global Warming
• Political Correctness
• People are easily offended
• Being rude to look “cool”
• Legalization of marijuana
8. Review Satire
Satire is:
- a literary technique in which
behaviors or institutions are
ridiculed for the purpose of
improving society
- What sets satire apart from
other forms of social and
political protest is humor.
10. Situational Irony
A contrast between what is
expected and what actually
occurs
Example: After safely
completing a dangerous
mountain climb, a climber
slips in the shower and hurts
herself.
11. Verbal Irony
When a writer or character
says one thing but means the
opposite
Example: A football player
fumbles the ball and loses the
game. When he reaches the
sideline, his coach tells him,
“Nice play!”
12. Understatement
A form of irony that creates
emphasis by saying less than
what is true or appropriate
Example: Reporting from a
town that was hit by a
hurricane, a reporter
describes the place as “a bit
messy.”
13. Forms of Satire
Juvenalian: bitterly condemns
human wrongdoing and
foolishness; reflects moral outrage
on the part of the speaker
Horatian: more tolerant
treatment of human folly
(foolishness); reflects the speaker’s
ironic amusement toward the
subject