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Swift as Nemesis - Modernity and Its Satirist (Hardcover)
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Swift as Nemesis - Modernity and Its Satirist (Hardcover)
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With much of the intellectual discourse of the last several decades
concerned with reconsiderations of modernity, how do we read the
works of Jonathan Swift, who ridiculed the modern even as it was
taking shape? The author approaches the question of modernity in
Swift by way of a theory of satire from Aristotle via Swift (and
Bakhtin) that eschews modern notions that satire is meant to reform
and correct. Linking satire to Nemesis, the goddess of righteous
vengeance, "Swift as Nemesis" develops new readings of Swift's
major satires.
From his first published work, Swift associates the modern with the
new science and represents modernity as a pernicious strain of
narcissism that devalues humanistic discourse. In his early
satires, he compiles a profane history of the modern in which the
new philosophy is an extension of the methodology of alchemists,
the debased Roman Catholic Church, and the various Puritan sects.
This history culminates in "A Tale of a Tub" with an assault on the
intellectual basis of that most formidable of all modern works,
Newton's "Principia."
In "Gulliver's Travels," Swift attacks modern culture while aiming
at individual readers. Novelistic identification with Gulliver's
narcissism (beginning with masturbation and encompassing various
scatological observations) implicates readers in the larger
cultural critique in which Gulliver, paralleling Narcissus, rejects
cultures he encounters until he embraces a cultural image that
destroys him. The wider cultural implications of Swift's work are
evident in the way he uses travel as a metaphor to link the inhuman
consequences of European imperialism with the discoveries of the
new science.
Finally, Swift's works, like the mirror Nemesis uses to destroy
Narcissus, are shown to return the narcissistic projections of
critics. Recognizing that Narcissus and Echo have become important
to the critique of modernism, the author argues that readers will
find it useful now to turn to the contextualizing role of Nemesis.
She emerges from Swift's critically irreducible satire with an
ironic claim on modernity itself.
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