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This volume brings together a range of miscellaneous short texts by
Voltaire, mostly undated and principally manuscript fragments. From
thoughts on the souls of animals, to how he organised his papers to
a joke proxy granting unlimited powers to act on his behalf, these
scraps shed light on Voltaire's working methods and on the possible
subjects of texts that he never published. Most notably, it
contains a supplement adding nineteen fragments to the edition of
Voltaire's Notebooks (OCV, vol.81-82). Contributors: David Adams,
Andrew Brown, Marie-Helene Cotoni, Nicholas Cronk, Jean Dagen,
Stephanie Gehanne Gavoty, Myrtille Mericam-Bourdet, Christiane
Mervaud, Gillian Pink, John Renwick, Gerhardt Stenger, David
Williams.
This complement to the "Corpus des notes marginales series"
reproduces marginalia by Voltaire found in works outside of his
personal library in both printed books and manuscripts. It occupies
a unique place within the series as some of the texts included
therein were annotated by Voltaire not for his own use but for
friends, acquaintances and correspondents. The volume therefore
offers a rare glimpse at marginalia whose chief purpose was to
impress a certain image of Voltaire himself upon the recipients of
the annotated works. A retrospective introduction to the "Corpus
des notes marginales de Voltaire" series provides a fascinating
portrait of Voltaire as a reader. Contributors: Samuel Bailey, Jean
Dagen, Ethel Groffier, John R. Iverson, Edouard Langille,
Christiane Mervaud, Christophe Paillard, Jean-Alexandre Perras,
Gillian Pink, John Renwick, Alain Sandrier, Gerhardt Stenger, Gemma
Tidman, David Williams, Irina Zaitseva.
When Rameau took the world of opera by storm in 1733, Voltaire set
aside his first libretto, "Tanis et Zelide", and wrote "Samson" and
later "Pandore" with the composer specifically in mind. All three
libretti depict rebellion against established religions,
culminating in spectacular scenes: Isis and Osiris destroying the
temple at Memphis; Samson bringing down the temple, crushing
himself and the Philistines; and Prometheus and the Titans doing
battle against the Roman gods.
Apres la mort de Voltaire, les editeurs des premieres OEuvres
completes posthumes, parues a Kehl, ont publie, dans leur version
du 'Dictionnaire philosophique', une quarantaine de manuscrits
trouves parmi les papiers de l'auteur. Le present volume a pour
objectif de reveler la nature et les origines de ces textes et
d'elucider les liens qui existent entre eux. L'edition fait l'etude
de la datation de ces textes et tente de resoudre les nombreuses
questions genetiques et contextuelles qui planent sur l'ensemble.
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