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Understanding Satire

Understanding Satire

Assessment

Presentation

English

9th - 12th Grade

Practice Problem

Easy

CCSS
RL.11-12.6, RI. 9-10.9, RI.11-12.9

+3

Standards-aligned

Created by

Elizabeth Rauscher

Used 25+ times

FREE Resource

11 Slides • 3 Questions

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Understanding Satire

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Satire is the art of making someone or something look ridiculous, raising laughter in order to embarrass, humble, or discredit its targets.

Satire

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Open Ended

Who is being made fun of in this video?

What universal idea is it criticizing or poking fun at?

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  1. Exaggeration

  2. Incongruity

  3. Reversal

  4. Parody

  5. Irony

  6. Anachronism

  7. Malapropism

Ways to Create Satire

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Caricature is the exaggeration of physical characteristics. For example, if you describe someone as tall, you might compare them to a tree or a building.

Cariacature

These techniques either increase or decrease a person, object or idea's size or significance. Understating the effects of something can show a character's deception while overstating can highlight a person's desires in relation to reality.

​​Overstatement and Understatement

​Exaggertion

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Incongruity is an often absurd method of satire where you present something unexpected into an otherwise normal scene or story. Comic writers commonly use this style where the actions of characters in a scene might seem normal, but the caption displays incongruity.

Incongruity

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Reversal is a type of satire that switches the positions of two things or people. This can be effective to highlight absurdities in human actions or behaviors. For example, a story of a life-size dog walking a human on a leash is a reversal. Reversal often exposes problematic qualities in situations or characteristics that we view as normal.

Reversal

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Parody in satire is the act of imitating either a person or an original work. In writing, you might mimic the chapter structure, setting or main characters in a particular work but alter other elements. If your reader recognizes the original work in your writing, the parody you employ might be more effective.

Parody

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Say one thing but mean the opposite, can include sarcasm.

Verbal

​When the audience knows more than the character(s).

Dramatic

​When the exact opposite happens from what is expected.

Situational

​A person pretends to be ignorant for personal gain.

Socratic

​Irony

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Anachronism is a type of satire that places people or objects in other periods of time. For example, including cars in a story about dinosaurs is an example of anachronism.

Anachronism

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Malapropism

​Malapropism is the intentional mispronunciation or misuse of a word by a writer. For example, a character might say that the class should rent a "liberty book." Liberty almost sounds like library, so the reader knows the intent. This creates entertaining content and can often reflect real mispronunciations made by public figures.

13

Match

Match the following example with the type of satire

"We're all human beans."

Your parents ask you where you were last night, even though they already knew you went to a party when you weren't supposed to.

A caveman microwaves his dinner

Reversal

Malapropism

Socratic Irony

Parody

Anachronism

14

Match

Match the following example with the type of satire

Caricature

Incongruity

Anachronism

Dramatic Irony

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Understanding Satire

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