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What Are the Different Uses of Satire?

By Alan Rankin
Updated: May 17, 2024
Views: 23,280
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Satire is a form of social criticism presented through popular media formats such as books, television, and editorial cartoons. The different uses of satire depend on the intent of the creator, or satirist, as well as the medium of presentation. Some satire is intended purely to entertain, presenting humor against a backdrop of social commentary. Often, satire is educational or informational, offering a look at the historical or modern context of a particular issue. Other times, satire is intended to be provocative, directly challenging corrupt people or practices and the social conventions that allow them to flourish.

The poet-philosophers of ancient Greece and Rome pioneered various uses of satire. Greek playwrights such as Aristophanes sent up aspects of Greece’s social and popular culture with plays that remained popular for centuries afterward. Two Roman poets, Horace and Juvenal, were such successful satirists that some forms of satire are associated with their names to this day. Horatian satire focuses on humor, gently inviting the audience to laugh at common human failings. Juvenalian satire, on the other hand, offers angry denunciations of specific social inequities and sometimes calls for reform.

The play Lysistrata by Aristophanes is a good example of an entertaining Horatian satire. Tired of war, the women of Greece decide to withhold sexual favors until the men of their nation agree to end their violent conflict. The play’s racy comedy presents its anti-war message in a pleasing and gentle way; it has been popular with audiences from Aristophanes’ time to the present. In modern times, The Simpsons is presented as an animated comedy about a typical suburban family. The show’s writers, however, frequently use the series as a platform to satirize many aspects of American culture.

Other modern uses of satire include the informational approach employed by The Daily Show and The Colbert Report. In the course of satirical and sometimes goofy commentary on current issues, both shows often present concise explanations of an issue’s complex details. Again, the use of comedy makes these complexities easier for audiences to digest. The animated comedy South Park, by contrast, is pure Juvenalian satire. The show’s creators invoke one of the most common uses of satire, to directly attack and poke fun at what they see as corrupt influences on modern society.

The political uses of satire include protecting the satirist in situations when social criticism is actively discouraged. There is a long tradition of anonymous or pseudonymous satire of oppressive ruling powers. Prior to the American Revolutionary War, the patriot Benjamin Franklin created editorial cartoons and drawings criticizing colonial Britain. When the U.S. Constitution later codified United States law, such satire was specifically protected as free speech. Many later satirists have used similar techniques to criticize repressive regimes.

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Discussion Comments
By candyquilt — On Nov 15, 2013

The article touched on a great point, satire can serve as political opposition. In democracies, expression of opinions is encouraged. We can criticize politicians openly without backlash.

In oppressive countries where there isn't freedom of speech, sometimes satire, literary works, music and art can be the only ways to oppose the government. And those governments usually try to prevent political satire.

By turquoise — On Nov 14, 2013

@ZipLine-- I think that parody is just meant to be humorous. There is no underlying message there, it's for entertainment. Satire is meant to entertain but also criticize something. If someone doesn't understand this though, a satire might seem like a parody.

How old are you?

I don't know if everyone is this way, but I didn't understand satire until I was in high school. I think it requires awareness of society and politics to get the message that a satire is trying to deliver.

By ZipLine — On Nov 14, 2013

What's the difference between satire and parody? Are they used for different things?

I don't think I get satire. It takes me too long to figure out what the criticism is. And when I do understand it, it seems too harsh.

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