A literary criticism of Swift's poet In her essay "Voyeurism in Swift's Poetry", Louis K. Burnett is exploring the theft of Jonathan Swift's work. She talked broadly about using this technique in his work and focused on several poems, including "Men's changing room". Burnet thinks that Swift's poetry is more peeping than chasing feces and corruption. To support this, she believes that every poem develops mainly on the experience of seeing obsceneness.
In order to adopt a contradictory philosophical position and clarify, I would like to summarize a part of Swift's text, especially short prose works and poems on the body of a woman, in this article. When such clues may be difficult to completely disappear, a number of unified philosophical ideas through a maze created by writing these and other Swift, spending a lot of time and serious effort Trying to pursue. One of the reasons. An important need for Swift to establish consistency is the impact of postmodern. Postmoderns tend to conditionally react to literary works of the 18th century.
Bloom, Harold, editor. Jonathan Swift: Criticism of modern times. New York: Chelsea Bill, 2000. In this important biography of a young adult reader, the famous literary critic Harold Bloom mentioned a modest proposal as an outstanding example of swift satire, the most barbarous and ruthless in the history of Western literature. Kelly, Ann. Jonathan Swift and Pop Culture: Myths, Media, and People. New York: Palgrave, 2002. Study Swift as a celebrity maker of his own cultural myth and modern mythology literature. In contemporary culture, Swift as a modest proposal creator is synonymous with an artist as a hero and shows an unpleasant truth in a polite society.