Swift's Narrative Satires: Author and AuthorityCornell University Press, 1983 - 183 pages Swift's Narrative Satires is an analysis of one of the major critical controversies about Swift's works: the relationship of author to text. Everett Zimmerman questions the conventional claim that narrative satire is necessarily a vehicle for conveying final judgments. He maintains instead that Swift requires the reader to search for the principle of authority that validates the satire, thereby implicitly challenging the authority of any author. |
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Page 32
... appears to resist the majority who wish to repeal Christianity , but his argument is an analysis of their actual practical interests , not of their mistakenly assumed ones : as Christianity has no moral effects on this majority , its ...
... appears to resist the majority who wish to repeal Christianity , but his argument is an analysis of their actual practical interests , not of their mistakenly assumed ones : as Christianity has no moral effects on this majority , its ...
Page 56
... appears is impoverished ; never- theless , it is lodged in a book , as Montaigne had shown it might be . 15 Like Montaigne , the tale - teller can " transplant " his many borrowings and can " confound " them with his own writings ...
... appears is impoverished ; never- theless , it is lodged in a book , as Montaigne had shown it might be . 15 Like Montaigne , the tale - teller can " transplant " his many borrowings and can " confound " them with his own writings ...
Page 67
... appears in the Glass of Nature ? So , that if it were not for the Assistance of Artificial Mediums , false Lights , refracted Angles , Varnish , and Tinsel ; there would be a mighty Level in the Felicity and Enjoyment of Mortal Man ...
... appears in the Glass of Nature ? So , that if it were not for the Assistance of Artificial Mediums , false Lights , refracted Angles , Varnish , and Tinsel ; there would be a mighty Level in the Felicity and Enjoyment of Mortal Man ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 7 |
The Authority of Satire | 29 |
The Hermeneutics of Self | 39 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accord allegory analysis appears argues attack attempts Bacon becomes belief biblical body brothers called century characteristic Christianity claims clothes conception concern connection consequently context continuity contrast create critic defines describes Digression discusses English Epicurean epistemological Essay example experience external fiction figure final finds Folly fourth give Gulliver Gulliver's History Hobbes Houyhnhnms human ideas identity implies includes interpretation issues kind knowledge language learning limits literal literary literature Locke Madness matter meaning method mind Montaigne narrative narrator narrator's nature object observation person perspective philosophical physical position possible praise provides question rational reader reason references rejects relationship remarks represent result rhetorical Royal satire sense separation shows Society sometimes spirit story Studies suggests Swift's Tale tale-teller theory things thought tion Travels truth understanding University Press utopia vision voyage writing Yahoos