A Modest Proposal

Words: 1182
Pages: 5

Who, or what, is the target of your satire, and why? In our skit we used stereotype, exaggeration, and colloquialism to satirize high school cliques in order to show how students need to look past their differences to see that they are all trying to overcome the same struggles of acceptance, peer pressure, and academics. When originally thinking of a topic to satirize, we were thinking very broad by thinking of things like current events, most of it was topics that didn't necessarily relate to us. I thought of the idea to take a step back and look for things that we all go through or see everyday. That's when we came up with the idea to satirize high school. We quickly narrowed it down to a certain part of high school, which would be the cliques or social groups that we see everyday. We didn't satirize a specific clique, we focused on certain more common cliques; rich kids, awkward/gothic kids, "don't care" kids, nerds, and the athletes. Each person …show more content…
In the Satire, A Modest Proposal, they took a bad situation and came up with a completely ridiculous solution. In the A Modest Proposal Satire, they used exaggeration very well by concluding to the fact of eating babies. For our satire there was never really a huge issue that involved a ton of exaggeration. I think my group did a good job exaggerating every character. By exaggerating every character the audience could understand how ridiculous certain cliques are made out to be. Also, by using stereotypes and colloquialism it helped make the cliques look more ridiculous then they really are. That being said, I do think my group hit our goal which was to make it clear that all students in cliques are the same because they struggle with acceptance, peer pressure, and academics. By coming together as one group instead of separate individuals it shows how different people from different back grounds can work