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Voltaire Comic Dramatist (English, French, Paperback)
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Voltaire Comic Dramatist (English, French, Paperback)
Series: Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment, 2006:03
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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No two comedies of Voltaire are alike: the breadth and diversity of
his comic dramaturgy in terms of form, technique, theme,
characterisation and tone, are revealed in this first critical
analysis and systematic reassessment of Voltaire's eighteen
comedies in their contemporary theatrical, literary and
intellectual contexts. This study also exposes the fundamental
unity of Voltaire's comic theatre, which lies in the plays' status
as innovative, experimental works written in creative dialogue
with, and fruitful opposition to, the contemporary trend towards
serious, sentimental comedy. Voltaire wrote his comedies over more
than forty years (1725-1769), when comedy was undergoing
significant redefinition as a genre. Typically dismissed as
un-dramatic, sentimental, overtly didactic and so of limited
interest today, his comedies emerge from this study as a series of
vigorous explorations in the many possibilities of the comic genre.
Voltaire wrote with the example of Moliere and the
seventeenth-century comic tradition constantly in mind, but at the
same time he diverged from that tradition in pioneering ways,
constantly testing the limits of generic convention and audience
expectation. In demonstrating the blend of tradition and innovation
at the heart of Voltaire's aesthetics of comic drama, this book
contributes to a remapping of the history of eighteenth-century
French comedy. It also leads to a new understanding of Voltaire's
comic aesthetics more broadly: his comedies are a substantial,
complex and vital part of his literary career, and studying them
helps us to revise our view of the author of satirical contes, the
dry wit whose distinctive literary mode can appear to be
destructive irony. Viewed in the light of his comic theatre, the
familiar Voltaire wears a significantly different expression.
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