gulliver’s travels by jonathan swift. jonathan swift 1667-1745

13
Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift

Upload: dortha-perkins

Post on 29-Dec-2015

256 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Gulliver’s Travelsby Jonathan Swift

Page 2: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Jonathan Swift1667-1745

Page 3: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

The Life of Jonathan Swift

• He was born in Ireland in 1667• He graduated from Trinity College in

Ireland in 1686• He got a Master’s degree from Oxford

College in England in 1692• He became a priest in the Anglican

Church of England in 1695• Most people in this time could not read or

write

Page 4: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

• He received a doctorate degree in religious studies in 1702

• He became interested in English politics and was a good debater

• He became active in politics and worked for a government official as a secretary

• He saw a lot of things in the way the wealthy, educated people treated the poor and uneducated that he did not like

• He wanted to show the wealthy how they really looked to others

• He wanted to see change in government policies

Page 5: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Satire

• Jonathan Swift is most famous for his style of writing called satire

• Satire is a written composition, in verse or prose, in which human folly and vice are held up to scorn and derision…..WHAT?????

• In other words, he wrote stories that made fun of the bad things that people do and the way they act to make them look ridiculous and silly in order to try to get them to change the way they live and act toward others (much better!)

Page 6: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Why Use Satire?

• The early 1700’s were a time when there was a great demand for social, political and economic change in England and Ireland

• At this time and place there was no such thing as freedom of speech and freedom of the press

• If an author was not careful, he could be jailed, charged with treason, and not be able to print his stories (remember the king was in charge)

• Using satire, Jonathan Swift was able to tell stories about make believe people and places when he was really making fun of English government and political figures

Page 7: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Why Did Satire Work for Jonathan Swift?

• Laughter and ridicule are two powerful tools for social changes

• Satire can show and criticize wrongdoings, abuses and unfair practices

• If anyone tried to accuse Swift of treason, he could say that his stories were just pretend fairy tales

Page 8: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Jonathan Swift Today

• Swift was very good at pointing out greed, pride, poverty, poor government and social injustices

• His writings about the way people can feel and act are just as true today as when he wrote in the 1700’s

Page 9: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Swift Stories with Satire

2 of his most famous works are:

A Modest Proposal (written in 1729) and Gulliver’s Travels (written in 1726)

You will read A Modest Proposal your senior year in English 4.

Gulliver’s Travels, the novel that we are about to read, uses 2 kinds of satire

Page 10: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Gulliver’s Travels Satire #1

• The story is about an English doctor named Lemuel Gulliver

• He takes 4 voyages, or trips, in a ship• In the 1700’s, books about travel were very popular to

read (sort of like how vampire books like Twilight are popular today)

• Gulliver’s Travels is written like the popular travel books of the time as a way of making fun of the genre, or kind, of books

• Jonathan Swift thought that people should spend more time thinking of ways to solve the problems where they lived than on reading books about other places

Gulliver’s Travels is a parody of the genre of “travel narrative”

During the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, these tales of voyages of exploration and colonial adventure were extremely popular:

Page 11: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Gulliver’s Travels Satire #2

• The name Gulliver suggests the word gullible. This may suggest that the character is too easily tricked or will believe anything

• The word travel means to take a trip. This suggests that Gulliver may make a trip where he sees or learns something new

Page 12: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Gulliver’s Travels Theme

• This novel explores the world of men and what it means to be human

• Remember that the person writing the story, Jonathan Swift, was a man who saw wrongs in government and people, and he wanted to make changes in the actions of both

Page 13: Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745

Quick Facts

Setting- traveling to different islands by shipGulliver- narrator, first person, and protagonist of

the storyAntagonists- various characters from the different

islandsThemes1. what is better for rules of behavior; being

physically stronger or morally correct 2. Individual rights vs. society3. Humans are not meant to understand everythingTone- use of irony and satire