None_Provided
Title: None_Provided
Category: /Literature/English
Details: Words: 2055 | Pages: 7 (approximately 235 words/page)
None_Provided
Category: /Literature/English
Details: Words: 2055 | Pages: 7 (approximately 235 words/page)
Book Four of Swift's Gulliver's Travels: Satirical, Utopian, or Both?
Once kick the world, and the world and you will live together at a reasonably good understanding.
Jonathan Swift
When Gulliver's Travels was first published in 1726, Swift instantly became history's most famous misanthrope. Thackeray was not alone in his outrage when he denounced it as "past all sense of manliness and shame; filthy in word, filthy in thought, furious, raging, obscene" (quoted in Hogan, 1979: 648). Since
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Yahoos and the History of Ideas In Penguin Critical Anthologies: Jonathan Swift, edited by D. Donoghue. Middlesex: Penguin Books, p. 363-385
Hogan, R. 1979. Jonathan Swift. The Macmillan Dictionary of Irish Literature. London: Macmillan Press, p. 636-637, 646-650.
Lock, F. 1999. Notes. Queens University, qsilver.queensu.ca/~lockfp/donoghue.html.
Orwell, G. 1971. Politics vs. Literature: An Examination of Gulliver's Travels. In Penguin Critical Anthologies: Jonathan Swift, edited by D. Donoghue. Middlesex: Penguin Books, p. 342-360.
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**Bibliography**