A Lash for the World: Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels

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    Abstract

    Gulliver's Travels is a landmark in world literature. Swift intended the work for the world and for all periods and the satire has a timelessness that makes it always contemporary. It has an enduring international multimedia presence. A mock travel book in a tradition of satirical imaginary voyages, Gulliver's Travels is confected from multiple genres and draws upon world literature, especially the literature of the classical world. What it isn't is a novel. Modern novelistic readings have led to a softening of what is an unpalatable hardcore misanthropic satire. Swift's work has multiple targets but a principal target is the reader. Aspects of Swift's satire are politically extremist. The work contains a famous denunciation of colonialism and provides an early astringent critique of a nascent global capitalism. A sensation and scandal at the time of its publication, the satire still arrests attention today.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationA Companion to World Literature
    EditorsKen Seigneurie
    Place of PublicationUnited Kingdom
    PublisherWiley Blackwell
    Pages1845-1857
    Volume5
    Edition1st
    ISBN (Print)978-1-118-99318-7
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2019

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