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Voltaire (1694-1778) Francois-Marie Voltaire (1694-1778) Francois-Marie

Voltaire (1694-1778) Francois-Marie - PowerPoint Presentation

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Voltaire (1694-1778) Francois-Marie - PPT Presentation

Arouet a talented boy but a notable scamp Father wants him to be a lawyer Takes the pen name de Voltaire At 24 he is successful as a playwright Accepted into the best literary and social circles ID: 632529

people french great frederick french people frederick great paris returns liebnitz liberty france finds political hyperbole life satire takes figures exaggeration corruption

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Slide1

Voltaire (1694-1778)

Francois-Marie

ArouetSlide2

“a talented boy, but a notable scamp”

Father wants him to be a lawyer

Takes the pen name “de Voltaire”

At 24, he is successful as a playwright

Accepted into the best literary and social circlesSlide3

Then in 1725…

Insults a nobleman; beaten and imprisoned in the Bastille

Upon his release, he flees to England

Enjoys the freedoms and libertySlide4

Returns to France…

Writes a sharp criticism of the French political system

Warrant for his arrest is issued

Remainder of his life is spent outside of FranceSlide5

Stays with Prussia’s Frederick the Great

Finds it difficult to live under his authoritarian rule and is kicked out by Frederick the Great himself.Slide6

Switzerland

Spends his last years in Switzerland

Continues to write and press for liberty and justice in FranceSlide7

Candide

Written in 1729, in his early sixties

Embittered by the death of the love of his life

Angry at Frederick the Great for evicting him from Prussia

Decides to write about “life’s injustices” and “the fuzzy thinking people use to rationalize their behavior”Slide8

Takes aim at

Inhumanity of the slave trade in America

Oppressiveness of the political systems throughout European nation states

Satirizes public figures who he finds offensive in their behavior

Lampoons the followers of German mathematician,

Gottfied

Wilhelm von

LiebnitzSlide9

Why

Liebnitz

?

He is the inventor of “philosophical optimism”

Believes that “there is no effect without a cause”

Pushes the idea that “this is the best of all possible worlds”

Liebnitz

is a favorite his dead lover; as if he desperately hopes for her return so they can continue to discuss his controversial ideas once again.Slide10

What is a satirist?

-technique employed by writers to expose and criticize foolishness and corruption of an individual or a society.

Satire intends to improve humanity by criticizing its follies and foibles.

A writer may point a satire toward a person, a country or even the entire world. Slide11

What are their weapons?

fictional characters,

which stand for real people, to expose and condemn their corruption, or foolish behavior.

Exaggeration -

usually in the form of

hyperbole

(an exaggeration which may be used for emphasis and humor)

It was so cold I saw polar bears wearing fur coats.

You could have knocked me over with a feather.

Slide12

Understatement

intentionally making a situation seem less important than it really is.

Opposite of hyperbole.

helps to develop other figures of speech such as

irony

and

sarcasm

Ex. “I have to have this operation. It isn’t very serious. I have this tiny little tumor on the brain.”

Catcher in the RyeSlide13

w

arped logic/non sequitur

An inference or conclusion that does not follow from the premises or evidence .

Ex. “ Slim, of medium height, and with sharp features, Mr. Smith's technical skills are combined with strong leadership qualities” (

New York Times

).

“This war is righteous because we are French!”

“You will do what I say because you are my wife!”Slide14

Returns to Paris

At 83, he returns to Paris

Dies 1 year later (1778)

Denied burial by the Parisian clergy

13 years later, at the height of the French Revolution his writing is praised and cited often in revolutionary pamphlets.

his body is returned to Paris, where people

line the streets to view the funeral

procession