РефератыИностранный языкCaCandide Voltaire Optimism Essay Research Paper Candide

Candide Voltaire Optimism Essay Research Paper Candide

Candide Voltaire Optimism Essay, Research Paper


Candide – Voltaire’s Writing Style


In Candide, Voltaire uses many writing techniques which can also


be found in the works of Cervantes, Alighieri, Rabelais and Moliere.


The use of the various styles and conventions shows that, despite the


passage of centuries and the language differences, certain writing


techniques will always be effective.


One common literary technique is the author’s use of one or more


of his characters as his ‘voice’ to speak out the authors views on a


certain subject. For instance, in Moliere’s Tartuffe, the author uses


the character of Cleante to speak out against religious hypocrites


(page 1419, lines 99-102):


Nothing that I more cherish and admire


Than honest zeal and true religious fire.


So there is nothing that I find more base


Than specious piety’s dishonest face.


In Candide, Voltaire makes use of several characters to voice his


opinion mocking philosophical optimism. On page 1594, Candide is


asking a gentleman about whether everything is for the best in the


physical world as well as the moral universe. The man replies:


…I believe nothing of the sort. I find that everything goes wrong in


our world; that nobody knows his place in society or his


duty, what he’s doing or what he ought to be doing, and that outside


of mealtimes…the rest of the day is spent in useless


quarrels…-it’s one unending warfare.


By having this character take on such a pessimistic tone, he


directly contradicts the obviously over-optimistic tone of Candide.


In the conclusion (page 1617) an old turk instructs Candide in the


futility of needless philosophizing by saying that “…the work


keeps us from three great evils, boredom, vice, and poverty.” In each


of these examples, the character chosen by the author comes across as


a reasonable and respectable person, making the author’s point of view


seem just as reasonable and respectable.


Another technique Voltaire uses in Candide is that of taking


actual people and events and weaving into his work of fiction. He


often does this to mock or ridicule his political and literary


adversaries, as shown in the conversation between the abbe’ and the


Parisian supper guests (page 1593). The abbe’ mentions two critics who


in Voltaires time have criticized his work. The critics are referred


to as boring and impudent by the supper guests. In much the same


manner Alighieri, in The Divine Comedy, has placed many of his enemies


in various circles of Hell. In one instance (page 797), Dante himself


pushes one of his political enemies back down into the swampy waters


of the river Styx. In Gargantua and Pantagruel, Rabelais mentions a


series of text books which are a part of the sort of educational


curriculum that he is satirizing. He ridicules their use in that it


takes Gargantua so long to learn simple tasks such as memorizing the


alphabet. In each of these cases, the authors are able to speak out


against people or practices in a way less confrontational than public


speaking, as well as state their opinion in a form where they cannot


be immediately contradicted.


Voltarie has occasion to use the comedic style of exaggeration


in Candide, such as the Baron’s sister refusing to marry Candide’s


father because he can only prove seventy-one quarterings of his family


tree. Later, Candide is sentenced to receive a flogging for having


deserted the Bulgar army.

He must make thirty-six passes through the


gauntlet of two thousand troops. More outlandish examples of


exaggeration can be found in Gargantua and Pantagruel, such as the


size of Gargantua’s mare (as big as six elephants) or the weight of


his dumbbells (each one is eight hundred and five tons). Beside being


entertaining to read, these exaggerations serve to point out the


ridiculousness of an ideal by showing it in a preposterous light.


The format in which Candide is written closely resembles that of


Cervante’s Don Quixote. In both books, the authors have chosen to name


each chapter in a descriptive style; the name of the chapter tends to


be a brief description of the action that is to take place within it.


Compare chapter three of Don Quixote, “Of the amusing manner in which


Don Quixote had himself dubbed a knight.” with chapter three of


Candide, “How Candide Escaped from the Bulgars, and What Became of


Him”. Alighieri uses this method in The Divine Comedy as well,


although on a much less descriptive level. Each of the cantos in his


Divine Comedy has short three or four word descriptions of what


happens in the canto. Many chapters in Candide end with some sort of


lead-in to the next chapter, giving the book a certain feel similar to


today’s television serials. This method is used in Don Quixote


(chapter 8), but in a much more dramatic fashion. Just as Don Quixote


is about to go into battle with the Biscayan, the action is abruptly


halted by the narrator who describes how the ‘original’ author had not


finished the story, but that a ’second’ author had picked up where the


first left off and the action continues in the next chapter. While


Cervantes may have been poking fun at this method by useing it in such


an exaggerated manner, both he and Voltaire use it effectively to keep


the reader’s attention and make him want to read on to find


out what happens next.


In Candide, the story is written such that the main character


and usually one or more companions have set out on a great journey


filled with adventures. It is in this journey that Candide’s outlook


on life is challenged; he is forced to become less optimistic about


this world being the best of all possible worlds. Similarly, in The


Divine Comedy, Dante goes on a journey as well; through Hell,


Purgatory and Heaven with his guide Virgil. Through his travels he is


shown the error of other men’s ways, serving to remind him of his own


sins and to put him back on the right path in life. In Don Quixote,


the would-be knight-errant sets out with his sidekick Sancho Panza on


an adventure too; determined to right wrongs and save damsels in


distress. Through the harsh realities of life he eventually comes out


of his insanity and sees that his way of life in his modern world is


outdated and obsolete. In placing their characters in these adventures


the authors demonstrate that, through experience with real-world


situations, these men trying to live by some outdated or far-fetched


ideal soon learn the error in their reasoning and adapt themselves to


the author’s way of thinking.


From these examples it can be seen how Voltaire, a writer from


the Enlightenment period, uses methods from writers centuries before


him to effectively communicate his point to his contemporary readers.


The times and issues may be quite different, but the writing style


works just as well for him as it did all the way back to the twelfth


century.

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