Essay Topic Hub

Modest Proposal
Essays

58+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

58 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Jonathan Swift's "A Modest Proposal" (1729) is one of the most studied satirical essays in the English literary canon, making it a frequent subject in courses on British literature, world literature, and rhetorical writing. The work is academically compelling because it operates on multiple levels simultaneously: as a political argument about poverty and colonial policy in Ireland, as a masterwork of ironic rhetorical strategy, and as a moral provocation about the treatment of the poor and their children. Its blend of cold economic logic with deeply disturbing subject matter gives students rich material for analyzing how form, tone, and argument interact in persuasive writing.

Student papers on this topic tend to approach Swift's essay through rhetorical and argumentative analysis, examining how the satirical proposal is constructed to shock readers into recognizing the real suffering of Ireland's poor and beggars. Some essays take a comparative angle, placing Swift alongside other writers and thinkers such as Machiavelli, John Calvin, and Thomas More to situate the work within broader traditions of political and moral argument. Others focus on close reading of Swift's language, tone, and use of irony, while some examine the historical and social conditions in Ireland that the essay responds to.

A strong essay on "A Modest Proposal" needs a precise thesis about what Swift's satire actually argues or achieves beyond its surface shock value. Evidence drawn from specific passages—particularly Swift's use of economic language and his framing of children as food—carries the most analytical weight. A common pitfall is treating the irony as self-explanatory rather than closely demonstrating how Swift constructs it through deliberate rhetorical choices.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Passion versus reason in human decision making
Passion and reason: A "Modest Proposal" for "Phaedra?"
Paper Undergraduate
Louis XIV\'s Versailles a Symbol
¶ … Louis XIV's Versailles a symbol of royal absolutism and an expression of the classical baroque style?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Interrogating Juveniles Without Parents Just
The man of character, sensitive to the meaning of what he is doing, will know how to discover the ethical paths in the maze of possible behavior. (Warren, 1964) want to call my parents."
Paper Doctorate
Alcan IT Management Systems Analysis Alcan\'s Growth
Alcan's growth as a global conglomerate in the aluminum and metal fabrication industry follows a similar trajectory of many companies whose business models forced rapid, highly distributed business models at the expense Information Technologies (IT) management systems consistency and performance. Alcan's IT management systems and underlying infrastructure have become balkanized as the company has grown into four separately functioning and highly autonomous business units. In evaluating the key success factors of successful Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) implementations in multisite locations, the most critical factor overall is creating a unified, well synchronized system of record across all ERP instances (Hanafizadeh, Gholami, Dadbin, Standage, 2010). A second key success factor for multisite ERP implementations is the ability to negotiate a very low level of maintenance pricing with ERP vendors in the form of multisite or use-based pricing instead of the traditional per-seat model (Law, Chen, Wu, 2010). A third key success factor in the implementing multisite ERP systems is the ability to create a shared set of analytics, financial reporting metrics and measured of shared collaboration performance across all sites (Nour, Mouakket, 2011). Alcan has none of these best practices in effect during the time periods of the case study. They are conversely creating very high costs of maintenance for themselves, paying $500M in software costs and fees to SAP, tolerating up to 400 systems dedicated to just pricing alone, and attempting to manage well over 1,000 systems throughout the four divisions. As the company continues to grow and attempts to move into new markets where unifying all four divisions is necessary, they will find their IT systems are more of a liability than an asset in their current configuration. Coupled with the escalating costs of keeping each of the four divisions under maintenance with SAP, the ongoing high costs of integration, there is the threat of compliance violations to industry safety and quality requirements in addition to Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) financial reporting requirements. All of these factors taken together point to the need for more effective IT management strategy that takes into account the critical success factors for ERP system integration in a highly decentralized organizational structure. The intent of this analysis is to evaluate the pros and cons of the current Alcan IT management system, in addition to evaluating the pros and cons of the new Alcan IT enterprise architecture as proposed by Robert Ouelette. The final section of the paper discusses if moving from the current Alcan IT management system to a new structure is advisable or not.
Research Paper Doctorate
Horace Juvenal Pope Dryden Swift
Horace, and Juvenal, and their Influences on Eighteenth Century Satire: Pope's the Rape of the Lock and Swift's "A Modest Proposal"
Research Paper Undergraduate
Swift's "A Modest Proposal": Satire and Social Setting
Setting in Jonathon Swift's "A Modest Proposal"
Paper Undergraduate
My own Modest Proposal
Global warming has grown to be one of the most debated topics currently being discussed among leaders from around the world. This issue is particularly important, especially given that its aftermath can be observed more…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Duality Jonathan Swift and Mary
Jonathan Swift and Mary Wollstonecraft were both consummate social commentators on the duality of power and oppression. Through the analysis of two of their works, namely, Swift's a Modest Proposal and Wollstonecraft's…
Paper Doctorate
Loss (Read P. 305) Leaving
The idea of loss can be handled differently according to the perspective. It can make one dwell forever, or allow one to move on easier. Don Quixote and Candide are both tales that have lived despite the passage of time. They both contain lessons that can still apply today and use satire as its preferred way of expression.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Modest Proposal Reaction to Swift\'s
In "A Modest Proposal," it is erroneous to state that the speaker does not believe that his own proposal boarders on cruelty. On the contrary, the speaker does not actually attempt to justify his proposal by stating…