Self-parody

Overemphasis can be made for the prevailing attitude in their life's work, social group, lifestyle and subculture.

Including lines and points made by others or by the recipient of the self-parody directing it to a parody of someone else which that other person is likely to remember and can't de-emphasize without frustration.

Sometimes critics use the word figuratively to indicate that the artist's style and preoccupations appear as strongly (and perhaps as ineptly) in some work as they would in a parody.

Such works may result from habit, self-indulgence, or an effort to please an audience by providing something familiar.

An example from Paul Johnson writing about Ernest Hemingway: The following are deliberate self-parodies or are at least sometimes considered to be so.

John Tenniel 's 1864 illustration for "The Lay of St. Odille" in The Ingoldsby Legends has been called "a very mild and good-natured parody" of his own painting of St. Cecilia (below). In both, the saint rises above the other figures and produces "a spiritual glow". The arc of cherubs replaces the arch with cherubs in St. Cecilia , and the dirt bank replaces a marble pedestal. Also, the fat man at right is taken from a trumpeter in another illustration by Tenniel, for John Milton 's " L'Allegro ". [ 1 ]
Tenniel's fresco on John Dryden 's "Song for Saint Cecilia's Day", c. 1849