ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Author Highlights Videos 22 videos
Dr. Seuss was a failure to start, but he soon learned to follow his heart. He wrote books about things that he knew, and soon enough, his book sale...
Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?
Emily Dickinson was a New England poet/hermit with a fascination with death and immortality. She wrote over 1000 poems in her lifetime, most of the...
Flannery O’Connor: Isn’t it Ironic? 1773 Views
Share It!
Description:
We had a hilariously ironic description of this video written and ready to publish, but then our dog ate it. So you get this one instead.
Transcript
- 00:03
Flannery O’Connor: Isn’t it Ironic? a la Shmoop
- 00:08
Many people are lacking a certain, critical nutrient.
- 00:10
No, it isn’t calcium. Okay, yeah… protein’s good, too.
- 00:15
But we’re actually referring to… a healthy sense of irony.
- 00:19
Let’s see you pick up a bottle of that stuff at your local GNC.
Full Transcript
- 00:24
Some try to make up for it with snarkiness…
- 00:27
…but snarkiness is to irony what aspartame is to sugar.
- 00:32
Satisfying at first, but it leaves a bad aftertaste… and might cause medical issues.
- 00:37
What we really need is 100%, grade-A irony.
- 00:41
Flannery O’Connor’s stories are chock full of the stuff.
- 00:44
Irony is ingestible in a variety of different ways… don’t worry, none of them are used
- 00:48
as suppositories.
- 00:49
First, we have verbal irony, where words mean the opposite of what they say.
- 00:55
Like the phrase… a good man is hard to find.
- 00:58
What exactly is a good man, anyway? And what if the people saying it aren’t even good
- 01:03
themselves? Then there’s situational irony, when what
- 01:07
happens is the opposite of what we expect. Flannery O’Connor’s work is a great source
- 01:14
of dramatic irony, when the audience knows something the characters don’t.
- 01:19
In fact, in today’s sound bite age, sometimes it feels like we’ve forgotten what irony
- 01:26
is…
- 01:27
We’re looking at you, Alanis.
- 01:28
Some people today say we’re in an age of new irony.
- 01:31
You might even call it the… Iron-y Age.
- 01:36
But Flannery O’Connor wouldn’t recognize this so-called irony as the real thing.
- 01:40
Although we’d love to hear what she’d have to say about Toddlers and Tiaras.
- 01:44
She’d probably say that we now live in an age of snark: snide remarks that are cutting
- 01:49
and malicious…
- 01:50
…but don’t dig in deep to the essential nature of the world, as irony does.
- 01:55
So what age do we live in?
- 01:57
An age of new irony?
- 01:58
An age of snark?
- 02:00
The age of Aquarius? Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Related Videos
They say that honesty is the best policy, but Jack lies about his identity and still gets the girl. Does that mean we should all lie to get what we...
Ever wish you could remember everything that you ever studied? How about everything that everyone has ever studied? Yeah, pretty sure our brains ju...
Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man is an American classic. Hope you're not expecting any exciting shower scenes though. It's not that kind of book.
Do not go gentle into that good night. In fact, if it's past your curfew, don't go at all into that good night. You just stay in your good bed and...