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Rhetorical Analysis Of A Modest Proposal

Decent Essays

A Modest Proposal: How to Twist a Fictional Proposal and Make it Convincing
Have you ever imagined what it would be like to eat a one-year child, whether stewed, roasted, or freshly baked? Perhaps you could have the chance for that unique experience, if you were English, living around the time period, when Jonathan Swift wrote his essay “A Modest Proposal” in 1729. The main purpose of his satirical essay was to capture the attention to the problems that were experienced by the Irish people, especially at that time when the English were imposing severe taxes on them. He proposed that Irish infants could be sold as food at age one, where a young healthy one-year child would be delicious and wholesome food. He offered many advantages for his scheme; for Irish, to decrease the burden and charges upon Irish parents, to prevent voluntary abortions, and to give them a new source of income; for English, they would benefit from a new food product, and at the long run, to eliminate a social problem and reduce the number of Catholics in Ireland.
In “A Modest Proposal”, Swift effectively used his sarcasm, irony and rhetorical exaggeration to both persuade, and deceive the readers for his clear, and undeclared telos (purposes), accompanied with his perfect usage of ethos, pathos and logos to support his immodest fictional proposal.
At first glance, Swift convinced the reader of his sympathy towards poor people, “It is a melancholy... .These mothers…are forced to employ…for their helpless

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