About "Tartuffe" by Molière /last part/

in #godflesh6 years ago (edited)

So, Molière achieves two goals - one, conceptual, and another, artistic, in the making of the episode we talk the previous part. It prompts the viewer to realize how hard it is to expose ourselves to a society that is extremely respectful of the doctrine, the prophet who is accepted to be called in several ways - hypocrisy, nonsense, hypocrisy - but which otherwise has a single, deeply striking effect - the collapse of trust between people. Artist Molière also achieves a second goal - the blindness of the sincerely devout Orgon acquires the dimensions of a tragic delusion that has sinister fateful replies at the end of the play, on the peace and well-being of the family.

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The failure of the truth discovered by Damius seems to intensify the realization of Dorin's tempting conception, convincingly accomplished by the suppressed Elmira. The impact of the successful maid of the housekeeper and the mistress of the house on the blinded Orgon, who listens patiently, hidden under the table, all the naked suzerain boldness of the two-person Tartuffe (IV action, scene 7), is determined unanimously by all commentators of the comedy as true her intrigue. The incessant screams of the horrified Orgon against the adulterer-adulterer whom he has received with a gentle, pious soul at his home ("Get out of the way!", "Leave home ...!") Actually mark the final sobering of the truly godly master and the indiscriminate exposing the foul-minded guest-intruder. The fifth act of the comedy "Tartuffe" could not be considered as a particularly high artistic achievement of the playwright Moliere. It is very edifying, it brings a new, irritating sensation of veracity, conspiracy. Some argue that Molière , a black-minded man who had little faith in the complete eradication of hypocrisy from the morals of society, has set out against his own, generally pessimistic, philosophy of life. Such a statement is based on a number of logical conclusions drawn from the life and creativity of the great comedian. But it should also be remembered that, at a time when the strict canons of classicism are weighing on stage makers, certain ideological and artistic compromises are imposed. Moliere must have been convinced internally that the admonitions of the "Brotherhood of the Holy Communion" preachers in the honorable families had a number of devastating consequences both in the moral plan and in the plan of their property prosperity. Ordinary overcrowding of the Orgon family is hardly a purely authorial fiction without any real-life reasons. Molière writes the fifth act with the obvious intention of firstening the end, for he still remembers his work as a comedy, and secondly, after the failure of the first version of Tartuffe, the comedian may have felt obliged as a right-wing classicist and to make a flattering dramatic curse of Louis the Great. Which King would resist the generous compliments of the Tartuffe final.

One of Moliere's first connoisseurs of art, who finds the serious dramatic crisis in the Tartuffe comedy, is the German philosopher Hegel. He said that the Molière's" Tartuffe "as the expression of a real villain, the pious god-devil, is far from gay, seriously, and the delusion of the deceived Orgon comes to the torture of misfortune, which can only be solved by Deus ex machina. In a deeper form, later a number of French critics analyzed in detail, in which, under the ridiculous situation often played out by the playful stereotypes of the farce, serious moral problems arise - the boundaries of trust, the ruthlessness of the hypocrisy, the ingratitude of generous patronage, the kinship of hypocrisy with betrayal, n. French writer Stendal admits that when he first watched the comedy "Tartuffe" he laughed "only twice, no more": Moliere's comedy is too much of a satire to bring me a casual, cheerful laugh." In Tartuffe, classicist Molière performs, in the manner of his philosophical comedies, the intrigue on the edge of funny and sad, between comic and seriously dramatic. In our analysis we deliberately focused your attention on the crisis situations in the play, which, despite the author's serious moral commitment, was designed to instigate, above all, laughter. But in a classicist comedy, laughter is rarely just dazzling, casual and cheerful. Under classical laughter, there is always anxiety and anxiety about the vivid human moral principles - honesty, sincerity, truthfulness, responsiveness to the other, and so on. When abnormal social conditions and corrupt public institutions begin to distort and strangle them, dramaturgs with an irreconcilable civic conscience, including the genius French comedian Molière , mobilize their creative powers and, depending on the magnitude of the dangers coming from outside, guard through laughter, satire or the seriously dramatic reproach, the moral resistance of the original, struggling with the wrongs, the human personality.

I hope you enjoy it and it was useful for you to meet Moliere and his Tartuffe.


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The importance of Jean-Baptiste Moliere in world literature is very difficult to exaggerate. He combined the best traditions of French folk theatre and advanced ideas of humanism in his work and created a new kind of drama — high Comedy, thus opening a new page in the history of not only French but also world theatre. Moliere outlined the ways for all the subsequent development of drama. His work served as a bridge between two great cultural epochs — the Revival and Enlightenment.
Comedy "Tartuffe" not only has not lost its relevance, today it is perhaps even more topical than ever: it is enough to pay attention to the high degree of credulity of people, which shamelessly abuse a variety of swindles and charlatans for material gain. Various sects are multiplying and flourishing, poisoning with their insane teachings the common sense of citizens, subjecting their will and consciousness again in order to take away their well-being. This issue was at the time of Moliere, it is now. Molière concentrated in his stage character all the distinctive features of the hypocrite, showed from close-up, threw a spotlight on them and made the audience remember them forever and then unmistakably recognize their speeches and actions of public figures in life, in the behavior of people around them, sometimes in their friends, maybe even in friends.
The value of the play lies in the fact that it boldly and vividly exposed the reactionary role of the clergy, created a generalized image of Tartuffe, which became a common expression of hypocrisy and hypocrisy.

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Though written in 1669, this play holds up in the 21st century. The correct version for a college class. Funny play. Discussing it with the prof and got lots more out of it. A quick read- I read it all in two sittings

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