Irony Isn't Dead, But It's Being Dissected
Few words are abused as much as "irony." Writing in the Guardian, Zoe Williams tries to straighten things out:
[T]here are a number of misconceptions about irony that are peculiar to recent times. The first is that September 11 spelled the end of irony. The second is that the end of irony would be the one good thing to come out of September 11. The third is that irony characterises our age to a greater degree than it has done any other. The fourth is that Americans can't do irony, and we [Brits] can. The fifth is that the Germans can't do irony, either (and we still can). The sixth is that irony and cynicism are interchangeable. The seventh is that it's a mistake to attempt irony in emails and text messages, even while irony characterises our age, and so do emails. And the eighth is that "post-ironic" is an acceptable term -- it is very modish to use this, as if to suggest one of three things: i) that irony has ended; ii) that postmodernism and irony are interchangeable, and can be conflated into one handy word; or iii) that we are more ironic than we used to be, and therefore need to add a prefix suggesting even greater ironic distance than irony on its own can supply. None of these things is true.
It goes on from there. My favorite line: "To anyone who thinks I'm insufficiently bigoted, I have serious doubts about the French."
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What the hell does this have to do with Libertarianism?
Come to think of it, there's nothing in the piece about chess either.
Now, if only the author of that article had screamed what many of us have known for years: NOTHING IN THAT DAMN ALANIS MORRISETTE SONG IS ACTUALLY IRONIC!
Or perhaps that's a pet peeve of mine đŸ™‚
Actually, Williams mentions that: "Alanis Morissette...proved some time ago, with her song Ironic, that she didn't know what irony meant."
What the hell does this have to do with Libertarianism?
Deep inside the literal mind...
How have such great minds missed the subtle irony of a song titled "Ironic" having no lyrics representative of actual irony? must I spell everything out to the masses?
"What the hell does this have to do with Libertarianism?"
Isn't it ironic?
Alanis Morissette did a song called "Ironic," which wasn't, while at the same time Joan Osborne climbed the charts with "One Of Us," a song full of irony that few people picked up on...
It wasn't full of irony, it was full of ignorance, as Ms. Osborne, the child of a man of the cloth, demonstrated in interview after interview...
But that's not important now. The only that matters is getting one step close to the day when no one, NO ONE, will confuse irony with mere coincidence.
I still don't understand what irony means. Not anymore. Not since my days as an ironist.
Well, Andrew, it's your own fault. You shouldn't have stopped eating your spinach.
Pedro, thanks for playing dictionary, but you don't have to pontificate about it, and you certainly don't need to swear.
Irony has two meanings - look in the fucking dictionary, PLEASE. Jesus, I coudn't stand all the English professors coming out in droves to talk about a stupid song.
2) a - Incongruity between what might be expected and what actually occurs: ?Hyde noted the irony of Ireland's copying the nation she most hated? (Richard Kain).
b - An occurrence, result, or circumstance notable for such incongruity.