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    Compare Candide and Tartuffe

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    In Tartuffe‚ Moliere’s use’s plot to defend and oppose characters that symbolize and ridicule habitual behavior’s that was imposed during the neo-classical time period. His work‚ known as a comedy of manners‚ consists of flat characters‚ with few and similar traits and that always restore some kind of peace in the end. He down plays society as a whole by creating a microseism‚ where everyone in the family has to be obedient‚ respectful‚ and mindful of the head of the home‚ which is played by the

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    A confrontation that Candide has is with a slave outside the town of Surinam after he has left El Dorado. While talking to the man he learns that “when we work at the sugar-canes‚ and the mill snatches hold of a finger‚ they cut off the hand; and when we attempt to run away‚ they cut off the leg; both cases have happened to me. This is the price at which you eat sugar in Europe.” After learning of this “abomination” he renounces his optimism that he has held onto through other horrible situations

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    Use Of Satire In Candide

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    As depicted in his novel Candide‚ a French satire written in the eighteenth-century‚ Voltaire stood as an indisputably witty writer. Throughout Candide‚ Voltaire targeted philosophical optimism‚ war‚ and religion: what he considered to be the ills of the world. His primary purpose in writing Candide was to oppose the philosophical theory of optimism. This anger towards optimism primarily arose as a consequence of the 1755 earthquake in Lisbon. He felt a deep compassion for the thousands of victims

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    like the plague. However‚ in Candide there are many examples of this. Not outright violence‚ but rather the type of violence that is referenced early on in the article‚ violence that is usually the byproduct of humankind striving to reach some other‚ more important goal. In CandideCandide does not go out of his way to kill‚ he ends up killing men‚ blinded by his desire to reunite with Cunegonde. The group murders described in this article remind me heavily of Candide‚ with Voltaire

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    Throughout his writing in Candide‚ Voltaire offers much commentary on the social structures‚ ideologies‚ and events present during his time. Voltaire constructs most of his characters in a highly exaggerated manner‚ creating highly caricaturized and often-absurd philosophies and viewpoints. Although this play was written in the 18th Century‚ many of the topics and parodies expressed through the hyperbolic characters are ageless in their applicability to many modern topics. In chapter five particularly

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    The author of the novel ‘Candide’ published this satirical fiction the year of 1759. Voltaire having went to school to become a writer and then being thrown out of numerous countries afterwards. Kings and noble people who were offended by Voltaire’s genre of satire and black humor throughout his books. Leibniz‚ a german philosopher proposed Optimism and this philosophy was created upon the reason that they thought that logic was the reason for why god created the world and its people were as perfect

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    What Is Candide A Satire

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    Candid Essay In Candid by Voltaire‚ we discover the struggle to expand the effectiveness of the satire in the novel that established a group of fools‚ each one lacking comprehension with errors in the surrounding world. Through his description of the human standpoint‚ it turns out to be obvious that the eighteenth-century intelligentsia were conscious of the unpredictable and often erratic origin of wealth. Voltaire‚ in his work‚ is dangerous of human addiction on financial goods including gold

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    Without careful scrutiny‚ the story of Candide appears no more than an average tale of an average man in search of fulfillment. In the absence of historical context‚ the eloquence of Voltaire’s words carry little substance and his vivid description remains empty. While the story of Candide is itself captivating‚ the work carries a far deeper significance. Candide primarily serves to reveal Voltaire’s Enlightenment philosophies through the satire of numerous 18th century institutions and realities

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    Clearly‚ Voltaire hated all religious institutions and customs. In his most satirical and important work‚ Candide‚ he incessantly mocks not only the Catholic Church‚ but also Protestants‚ Jews‚ and Muslims. Voltaire ’s sharpest criticism was directed at the Catholic Church. His relationship with the Church "was one of uninterrupted hostility" (Candide‚ "Religion"‚ pg. 13)‚ and in Candide‚ he attacks all aspects of its social structure and doctrines. When Pangloss explains how he contracted syphilis

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    Ataliah Landsman Ms. Barron Advanced World Literature and Composition February 6‚ 2013 Voltaire Use of Satire In Candide Voltaire portrays an image of human suffering and cruelty in our world. He criticizes the philosopher Gottfried Leibniz’s optimism theory in the novel Candide. Candide was written by Voltaire and translated by John Butt in 1950. “Each particular contingent fact in the world has an explanation” (“God in Leibniz’s Theory” 1). In the novel‚ Candide’s teacher Pangloss believes

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