NOTES - Voltaire Bio and Candide Bckgrd.

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Background Notes – Voltaire and Candide
BIOGRAPHY – Voltaire
- Born in France in 1694; died 1778
- Writer, essayist, deist (belief in existence of a god on the evidence of reason
and nature only; rejects supernatural revelation), philosopher
- Voltaire is pen name for Francois-Marie Arouet
- Considered one of the greatest satirists in literature
- One of several Enlightenment figures
- His work influenced important thinkers of both the American and French
Revolutions
- Outspoken supporter of social reform (hence the connection to the
Enlightenment/Age of Reason)
- His humorous verses made him a favorite in society circles. (In 1717, his
sharp wit got him into trouble with the authorities. He was imprisoned in the
Bastille for eleven months for writing a scathing satire of the French
government.)
- Known for his wit, philosophical sport, defense of civil liberties, including
freedom of religion
- Most famous works – Dictionary of Philosophy; L’Ingenu (1767); Zadig
(1747); and Candide (1759)
- Credited with creating/inventing the philosophical novel – minimally defined
as a genre in which characteristic elements of the novel are used as a vehicle
for the exploration of philosophical questions and concepts. In its “purest”
form, it perhaps most properly designates those relatively singular texts
which belong to both the history of philosophy and of literature. Term is
often used interchangeably with the more recent concept of the “novel of
ideas.”
- Was Enlightenment’s most vigorous anti-religious polemicist (practitioner of
disputation or controversy); well-known advocate of intellectual
freedom
Writing Style
- Known for restraint (focus on primary subject/target) and simple verbal
treatment
- Candide is best example of his style (story attacks religious and
philosophical Optimism)
- Almost all of his works (whether verse or prose) are preceded by Prefaces –
this models Voltaire’s caustic yet conversational tone
- Works frequently contain phrases that refer to abuses of the people by
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royalty or the Clergy
Candide features satire, irony, sarcasm and hyperbole
Style becomes tedious and onerous at times
Primary literary device as a satirist – IRONY (all types)
Irony is characterized by grim humor and understatement
Depended especially on exaggeration – also used euphemism, caricature (a
grotesque imitation or misrepresentation), parody
Candide Background
-Story is a farcical, humorous, far-fetched tale of satire (uses BOTH Horatian and
Juvenalian)
-Satirizes the philosophy of the time – Optimism (founded by Gottfried Wilhelm
Leibniz) which stated “all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds”
-Leibniz was a brilliant mathematician, philosopher, and thinker who contended
that Earth is the best world possible inasmuch as it was created by a
benevolent, omniscient, all-powerful God. It was this idea that Voltaire
mercilessly satirizes in Candide.
-Voltaire ridicules Leibniz and his philosophy as simple-minded and unrealistic –
uses the character Pangloss in the story as a parody of Leibniz.
-Reflects Voltaire’s scathing response that Leibniz’s philosophy is an easy way to
rationalize evil and suffering in the world.
-As a philosophical novel (or philosophical story), Candide features swift-moving
adventure story where characterization counts for little and the moral (or
sometimes immoral) lesson for much (i.e., picaresque novel - a genre of
prose fiction which depicts the adventures of a roguish hero of low social
class who lives by his wits in a corrupt society. Picaresque novels typically
adopt a realistic style, with elements of comedy and satire; originated in
16th-century Spain and flourished throughout Europe in the 17th and 18th
centuries)
-Story is said to be influenced by the injustices against Voltaire (exiles, abuses,
imprisonments, etc.)
-Sentences are brief and sharp; original text is easy to understand; narrative moves
at lightening speed.
-Because Voltaire sustains his rapid-fire presentation of details throughout the
novel and resorts repeatedly to irony, hyperbole, and sarcasm for effect
(presented in same sentence patterns); style becomes tedious at times.
-Story reflects extensive use of ‘superlative’ – the ‘most beautiful castle’, the
gentlest of characters’, etc. – used with exaggerations to prepare readers for
dire events that follow (is a STRUCTURAL element)
-Story overview - is a tale of an innocent/naïve young man embarking on a series
of adventures during which he discovers much evil in the world.
KEY FACTS – Story
Themes:
- Corrupting power of money
- Religious hypocrisy
- Uselessness of philosophical speculation
- Folly of optimism
Motifs:
- Resurrection; rape; political oppression
- Greed and licentiousness
- Arrogance and pretensions of the upper class
- Sexual abuse/exploitation of women
Symbols:
Pangloss; the garden; the Lisbon earthquake (basis of Voltaire’s criticism of
Leibniz’s philosophy)
Genre: Satire; adventure novel; bildungsroman (picaresque)
Language: French
Time and Place Written: Schwetzingen, Prussia; and Geneva, Switzerland;
1758–1759
Date First Published: January or February, 1759
Narrator: Anonymous satirical narrator
Point of View: The narrator speaks in the third person, focusing on the perspective
and experiences of Candide. Events and characters are described objectively most
of the time. Occasionally, they are described as Candide sees them, but this is
always done with an ironic tone.
Tone: Ironic; melodramatic
Tense: Past and present
Setting (Time): 1750s
Setting (Place): Various real and fictional locations in Europe and South America
STORY ELEMENTS:
PROTAGONIST ·
Candide
MAJOR CONFLICT ·
Candide and Pangloss’s optimistic world view is
challenged by numerous disasters; Candide’s love for Cunégonde is
repeatedly thwarted.
RISING ACTION ·
Candide is expelled from his home for kissing Cunégonde;
he wanders the world attempting to preserve his life and reunite with his
beloved.
CLIMAX ·
Candide finds Cunégonde enslaved in Turkey; the two are
married.
FALLING ACTION ·
Candide, Cunégonde, Pangloss, and their friends struggle
with boredom; they find solace in gardening.
FORESHADOWING ·
There is virtually no foreshadowing in this wildly
chaotic narrative. Candide’s repeated musings about what Pangloss would
think of events foreshadows Pangloss’s ‘resurrection’
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