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Candide Analysis

Decent Essays

Yesterday is Just a Stale Today Imagine a world filled with rape, murder, violence and poverty. All the things that could go wrong will go wrong. Everywhere a person looks they are met with danger to themselves or the people around them. This is the world that is visualized in the satirical novel Candide by Voltaire. Throughout the book, Voltaire criticises the military, religion and gender roles and how these things plague the world that the book is set in. Many of the political and class systems in the book are considered wrong to the general ideology in the modern era. For example, the book is set during the era of the Spanish Inquisition where large amounts of people were forced to leave spain, and on significant accounts were executed, based on their religious beliefs. Undoubtedly, this volume of discrimination is eradicated, but is today's modern world just as terrifying and unpleasant as the world in Voltaire describes as such in Candide? One specific example of a subject that Voltaire uses to convey the cruelty of his world is by showing how the military does not necessarily give options to the people it’s trying to protect. On multiple occasions Voltaire describes the military as brutal and deadly and how it steals the freedom from many young men, like candide, who was thrown into the military just because he was “five feet five”. They flattered Candide saying that he was perfect and that “people of [his] appearance and merit never pay anything”(21). Although Candide was submissive, he was dragged into the military without objection because they paid for his dinner and promised a better life. Later, Voltaire focuses on the violence within the military. After being trained into obedience, he took a harmless stroll outside. As a result, he is given a choice between death and torture because he obviously is not allowed the free will of doing this. The narrator then explains that “Using the gift of God known as freedom, he decided to run the gauntlet thirty-six times”(22). In this situation, he was given the choice to either die or get beaten up and Candide obviously chose to get beaten up. This sarcasm is criticizing how the few moments that Candide gets a choice, it's usually between two bad ones.

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