What is another word for satires?

Pronunciation: [sˈata͡ɪ͡əz] (IPA)

Satires are a form of literary work that use humor, irony, and ridicule to criticize or comment on society or individuals. There are several synonyms for the word "satires", including lampoons, burlesques, parodies, spoofs, caricatures, and farces. Lampoons are written or acted pieces that criticize or mock a person or group of people in a harsh or biting way. Burlesques use exaggeration, absurdity, and humor to parody certain aspects of society or culture. Parodies imitate a particular work or genre for humorous or satirical effect. Spoofs use exaggeration and mockery to satirize a particular person or situation. Caricatures are exaggerated depictions of individuals that exaggerate or distort their physical features. Finally, farces are humorous plays or sketches that use exaggerated or improbable situations to make fun of society or individuals.

Usage examples for Satires

Most radical of all is the theory according to which Thomas Drant translated the satires of Horace.
"Early Theories of Translation"
Flora Ross Amos
The Roman satires alone in pagan literature approached, though weakly, the ecstasy for social justice in the prophecies of the Bible.
"The Literature of Ecstasy"
Albert Mordell
Pope's satires are poetry.
"The Literature of Ecstasy"
Albert Mordell

Famous quotes with Satires

  • We pay homage to the people who came before, doing satires, like Mel Brooks; we're just carrying the torch.
    Shawn Wayans
  • Our fathers were actually business partners in the same real-estate firm, and we got together and thought, How can we get a movie together and get distribution and create a new movie genre? We started by making satires of commercials.
    David Zucker
  • It is folly for an eminent person to think of escaping censure, and a weakness to be affected by it. All the illustrious persons of antiquity, and indeed of every age, have passed through this fiery persecution. There is no defense against reproach but obscurity; it is a kind of concomitant to greatness, as satires and invectives were an essential part of a Roman triumph.
    Joseph Addison
  • and the Enderby books prove that Burgess is as clever as he seems. His utopian satires, of which is yet another, mainly just seem clever. At a generous estimate there are half a dozen ideas in each of them.
    Clive James
  • We can not but admire a man who, subject to a lifelong illness that inflicted with frequent recurrence an intense mental agony, fought persistently against his weakness—at times their master, at times a victim to their influence. Still he did not flinch even under this torture, but held his pen and pressed it to write in a cause which was distinctly unpopular. Cowper was preeminently a poet of feelings; he may have been melancholy, but he pointed out to his readers how they were themselves subjects of emotion. He owed a debt to Providence, and he rebuked the people for their follies. In doing so he was regardless of his own fame and of their opprobrium. He gave them tolerable advice, and strove to awaken them from their apathy to a sense of their duty towards their neighbours. First of poets, since the days of Milton, to champion the sacredness of religion, he was the forerunner of a new school that disliked the political satires of the disciples of Pope, and aimed at borrowing for their lines of song from the simple beauties of a perfect nature.
    William Cowper

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