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Irony is intriguing for INTJs, since it possess a somewhat cynical and even dark quality in many cases.
They enjoy being able to observe things, and pull out the most interesting meaning behind it. INTJs rarely miss the presence of irony, even in their daily lives, and enjoy being able to perceive it. ENTJs value efficiency, which can cause them to prefer remaining focused on what needs to be done. While ENTJs are hardworking and focused people, they also have a more playful side to their personality.
The ENTJ wants to get things done when they are in work mode, but knows how to appreciate things in life. They enjoy pushing themselves to grow and absolutely love feelings challenged. ENTJs often appreciate irony, and are somewhat sarcastic individuals. INTPs are complex people, with incredibly rich and active inner minds. They enjoy diving deeper into the meaning behind things, and often appreciate irony. INTPs are always looking to challenge themselves, and have incredibly analytical minds. Irony is not just something you can simply take for face value, and requires a little more thought- this makes the INTP rather intrigued.
They can appreciate the darker side of things, and enjoy a little irony for dramatic result. They are sharp people, who enjoy feeling challenged and love being able to pick things apart and analyze them. ENTPs hate staying stagnant, and are very imaginative and curious people. Their desire to constantly grow and learn, causes them to be interested in a wide variety of things.
While irony can make some people uneasy, ENTPs have a great appreciation for it. They realize it can be used to convey a certain point, or simply utilized as a comedic tool. ENTPs enjoy being able to approach things from a different perspective, and often are very sarcastic and somewhat ironic people. They also enjoy satire quite a bit, and love anything that pushed and challenged their minds. ISTJs are internally focused people, which means they often enjoy literature and anything that can help them be more introspective. They prefer being pragmatic and often focus on getting things done.
ISTJs have high standards for themselves, and are constantly pushing forward in life. They often enjoy elements of irony, especially when they can absorb it in their spare time. Anything that pulls ISTJs away from being efficient and upfront, can bug them a bit though.
ESTJs are practical people, who prefer to focus on what they can change. ESTJs value efficiency, and simply want to be capable of getting things done properly. These things can really only hinder their ability to be effective in their work, and likely means very little for the ESTJ. However, this state of affairs does not occur by human design. In some religious contexts, such situations have been seen as the deliberate work of divine providence to emphasize truths and to taunt humans for not being aware of them when they could easily have been enlightened this is similar to human use of irony.
Such ironies are often more evident, or more striking, when viewed retrospectively in the light of later developments which make the truth of past situations obvious to all. Irony is often used in literature to produce a comic effect. This may also be combined with satire. For instance, an author may facetiously state something as a well-known fact and then demonstrate through the narrative that the fact is untrue.
Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice begins with the proposition "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. The irony deepens as the story promotes this romance and ends in a double marriage proposal. Romantic irony is "an attitude of detached scepticism adopted by an author towards his or her work, typically manifesting in literary self-consciousness and self-reflection".
Joseph Dane writes "From a twentieth-century perspective, the most crucial area in the history of irony is that described by the term romantic irony. A universal type of irony? The irony used by romantics? This work is a play within a play set in a lunatic asylum, in which it is difficult to tell whether the players are speaking only to other players or also directly to the audience.
A Little Irony by Tom Milsom, released 13 July Time should stop why Love never came to me It moves unscientifically But now you're. irony: the expression of one's meaning by using language that normally [count noun]: one of life's little ironies; (also dramatic or tragic irony) a.
When The Herald says, "The regrettable incident you've just seen was unavoidable indeed foreseen by our playwright", there is confusion as to who is being addressed, the "audience" on the stage or the audience in the theatre. Also, since the play within the play is performed by the inmates of a lunatic asylum, the theatre audience cannot tell whether the paranoia displayed before them is that of the players, or the people they are portraying.
Muecke notes that, "in America, Romantic irony has had a bad press", while "in England Romantic irony is both a philosophical conception of the universe and an artistic program. Ontologically, it sees the world as fundamentally chaotic. No order, no far goal of time, ordained by God or right reason, determines the progression of human or natural events Of course, romantic irony itself has more than one mode.
The style of romantic irony varies from writer to writer But however distinctive the voice, a writer is a romantic ironist if and when his or her work commits itself enthusiastically both in content and form to a hovering or unresolved debate between a world of merely man-made being and a world of ontological becoming. Gesa Giesing writes that "the most common form of metafiction is particularly frequent in Romantic literature. The phenomenon is then referred to as Romantic Irony.
For examples, Patricia Waugh quotes from several works at the top of her chapter headed "What is metafiction? I am confident my own way of doing it is best" - Tristram Shandy. For the first twelve chapters Chapter 13 notoriously begins:. I do not know.
This story I am telling is all imagination. These characters I create never existed outside my own mind. Socratic irony is "the dissimulation of ignorance practised by Socrates as a means of confuting an adversary". The Chambers Dictionary defines it as "a means by which a questioner pretends to know less than a respondent, when actually he knows more". Zoe Williams of The Guardian wrote: A more modern example of Socratic irony can be seen on the American crime fiction television series, Columbo. His untidy appearance adds to this fumbling illusion.
As a result, he is underestimated by the suspects in murder cases he is investigating. With their guard down and their false sense of confidence, Lt.
Columbo is able to solve the cases, leaving the murderers feeling duped and outwitted. It is negativity, because it only negates; it is infinite, because it does not negate this or that phenomenon; it is absolute, because that by virtue of which it negates is a higher something that still is not. The irony established nothing, because that which is to be established lies behind it Where much of philosophy attempts to reconcile opposites into a larger positive project, Kierkegaard and others insist that irony—whether expressed in complex games of authorship or simple litotes —must, in Kierkegaard's words, "swallow its own stomach".
Irony entails endless reflection and violent reversals, and ensures incomprehensibility at the moment it compels speech. Similarly, among other literary critics, writer David Foster Wallace viewed the pervasiveness of ironic and other postmodern tropes as the cause of "great despair and stasis in U. Humor from that era most notably, Seinfeld relies on the audience watching the show with some detachment from the show's typical signature awkward situations.
The generation of people in the United States who grew up in the 90s, Millennials , are seen as having this same sort of detachment from serious or awkward situations in life, as well. Hipsters are thought to use irony as a shield against those same serious or genuine confrontations. Some speakers of English complain that the words irony and ironic are often misused, [64] though the more general casual usage of a contradiction between circumstance and expectation originates in the s. We were always kidding about the use of irony. I maintained that it was best never to use the word because it was too often substituted for coincidence.
Alanis Morissette's song "Isn't it Ironic?
Tim Conley cites the following: No agreed-upon method for indicating irony in written text exists, though many ideas have been suggested. For instance, an irony punctuation mark was proposed in the s, when Henry Denham introduced a rhetorical question mark or percontation point , which resembles a reversed question mark. This mark was also advocated by the French poet Marcel Bernhardt at the end of the 19th century, to indicate irony or sarcasm. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. For the Alanis Morissette song, see Ironic song. For other uses, see Irony disambiguation. Archived from the original on Archived from the original on 12 February Retrieved 18 September Archived copy as title link ; cf.
Kirkwood, A Study of Sophoclean Drama , p. Charlie Chaplin's Comedy , P. The Sequence Approach , Continuum, , pp. Home Questions Tags Users Unanswered.
The meaning of the word "irony" is very confusing to me! Here are few examples: So the irony is this: Can anyone please explain me what "irony" exactly means?
Many many thanks in advance! Dukhabandhu Sahoo 1 1 6. SteveMelnikoff The lyrics of A. Morisette's song have many instances of irony. That's a matter of some debate; you might want to read this summary. GrIsHu 3 I am not sure any of these definitions apply to the OP's second example. There is also a usage of "irony" related to the hipster subculture that seems slightly different than the ones presented here. Let's consider your example sentences. I believe that this use of irony in must be revisited with irony has the sense of socratic , which is used when someone usually a teacher pretends to be stupid in order to show how stupid his pupils are while at the same time the reader or audience understand the situation.
Mari-LouA Thank you for the catch. Jan 18 '14 at Sign up or log in Sign up using Google.
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