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Modest Proposal
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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.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Modest Proposal Dear Mr. President:
We, as a nation are fat. Let us make no bones (ha!) about this fact. Although some of us (like yourself) pound the treadmill on a daily basis more than 34% of all Americans are overweight and 30.5% are obese.
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¶ … satire about water pollution, following Jonathan Swift's "A Modest Proposal" as a model. Water pollution is an important problem facing the world, but that does not mean that it cannot be viewed with humor.
Paper Doctorate
World literature: major works and traditions
In Jonathan Swift's essay, "A Modest Proposal", the author proposes that the poor in a humorous bent that the poor should eat tor sell heir own starving children to the rich during a the great potato famine in Ireland. Obviously, the key factor in Jonathon Swift's essay is that the reader must recognize that he is not literally suggesting the poor to cannibalize. Rather, he is acknowledging the fact of the scarcity of food and therefor empathizes with the struggling and famished souls in the country of Ireland. Jonathon Swift goes to very great lengths to support his argument his argument and to maintain the satire, including the a list of possible preparation styles for the children and the calculations showing the financial benefits of his suggestion. This essay is widely held to be one of the greatest examples of sustained irony in the history of the English language. The entirety of "A Modest Proposal" is satirical because it makes fun of other grand ideas that people have proposed to solve big problems in society. The proposal itself (that the Irish should eat their babies) is satirical because it makes fun of people who propose absurd things thinking that they are practical. Jonathon Swift's reference to boys and girls as not a "saleable commodity" is a good particularly good example because it goes on to suggest the cold thinking of people who go on to argue for turning everything into the questions of economics.
Paper Undergraduate
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Paper Undergraduate
Tartuffe, Swift and Voltaire in His Own
In his own way, Moliere's Tartuffe represents one aspect of the Enlightenment, if only a negative one, since he is a purely self-interested individual who cares only about advancing his own wealth and status. He is a fraud, a con artist and a hypocrite who puts on a show of religion but is really only interested in stealing Orgon's estate—and his wife. Orgon is too foolish to understand this until the end, although his wise and cunning servant Dorine understands Tartuffe's intentions almost immediately. In this case, the uneducated servant is far more intelligent and clever than her master, who even seems callously indifferent to the illness of his wife.
Research Paper Undergraduate
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