A Modest Proposal Rhetorical Analysis

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Everyone has those days where nothing seems to go as planned. You wake up in the morning and there’s no toothpaste left. No big deal, right? Then you try to fix your hair up nice for the day, but you have what looks like a rat's nest on your head. Now you’re annoyed. You go to work, only to find that the stack of papers that you thought you organized yesterday somehow managed to appear back on your desk. “It’s going to be a rough day….” Sound familiar?
These are the days where we turn on the TV after a long day, and watch a comedy series to make ourselves feel better. It is humor that allows society to fight against the difficulties in life. Without humorists one becomes sad, anxious and depressed. Suddenly the bad hair days leave you wanting to go bald, and your first break up has you sitting in an apartment with a tub of ice cream and your ten cats.
Humorists also gives something for people to think about. Without humorists there would be no commentary, no arguments, or mocking of issues that appeal to the masses of people. …show more content…

Satirical writer, Jonathan Swift, who wrote A Modest Proposal, was perfectly fine with stating things that others would not by using sarcasm, and mockery. His solution to solve famine by chowing down on children certainly turned some heads. That was his intention. He used satirical writing to convince the majority of a message he tried to convey. People who wouldn’t normally pay attention to political issues become interested, because humorists create conversation. Humorists make people think, and without them a dangerous society erupts. People are left without a voice because they are afraid to speak, so they stop questioning

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