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Jonathan Swift's Satire Analysis

Decent Essays

A Proposal to Ireland

In “A Modest Proposal”, Jonathan Swift offers up his satirical view of how he could help the country of Ireland. Tired of the current state of his country, economically and otherwise, he has devised a whole new industry: “For we can neither employ them in handicraft nor agriculture; we neither build houses (I mean in the country) nor cultivate land” (Swift 677). His brilliant plan would not only help to feed the starving, it would also help to provide clothes to those who had none, to some degree, and instill some protection into these women’s lives as it would not be profitable to harm them for fear of harming the product they are producing. Of course this is satire, however, he is using it as a tool to shed light on some real problems plaguing Ireland.

Swift’s satirical suggestion stems from several different issues that, at the time, were plaguing his country. One of those issues is overpopulation and how population contributes to the country’s economy and work force. In his story he not only offers satire, but he also uses the language of economics to calculate the people’s value. He calculated the number of people in his country, and from this he figured how many of those were stricken by poverty, how many of these people are breeders capable of producing, and also how many children these breeders may bring into a life of poverty. “That the remaining hundred thousand may at a year old be offered in sale to the persons of quality and

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