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The Bickerstaff-Partridge Papers

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About This Book

A sequence of satirical pamphlets and mock letters that lampoon popular almanac-makers and astrology by inventing a fictitious prognosticator whose published predictions and mock-obituaries spark a pamphlet war. Contributors produce parodies, elegies, rebuttals and a formal vindication that blend learned parody, pseudo-scholarly Latinisms, and biting humor to expose gullibility and commercial imposture. The pieces alternate between deadpan assertions, parodic praise from fabricated foreign correspondents, and the target's indignant replies, turning public credulity and the print culture of the day into a comic experiment about authorship, credibility, and the power of satire.

About the Author

Swift, Jonathan portrait

Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) was an Irish satirist, essayist, and political pamphleteer, best known for his sharp wit and keen observations of human nature. His most famous work, "Gulliver's Travels," is a satirical exploration of society and politics through the fantastical voyages of Lemuel Gulliver. Swift's writing often critiques the social injustices of his time, as seen in his provocative essay "A Modest Proposal," which suggests an outrageous solution to poverty in Ireland. A prominent figure in the early 18th century, Swift's contributions to literature and political discourse have left a lasting impact, making him a key figure in the canon of English literature.

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