Genre of literary or dramatic work that ridicules human pretensions or exposes social evils. Satire is related to
parody in its intention to mock, but satire tends to be more subtle and to mock an attitude or a belief, whereas parody tends to mock a particular work (such as a poem) by imitating its style, often with purely comic intent.
The Roman poets
Juvenal and
Horace wrote
Satires, and the form became popular in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries, used by
Voltaire in France and by Alexander
Pope and Jonathan
Swift in England. Both satire and parody are designed to appeal to the intellect rather than the emotions and both, to be effective, require a knowledge of the original attitude, person, or work that is being mocked (although much satire, such as
Gulliver's Travels by Swift, can also be enjoyed simply on a literal level).
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