Francois-Marie Arouet, known better by his pen name, Voltaire, was a French writer who’s satirical and political works during the Enlightenment made his name as one of the most famous Intellectuals of the time period. Voltaire was outspoken almost to a fault, as his wit and cunning led him to have to flee Paris due to arguments with French nobleman. In 1759, he published Candide, which was known by multiple titles such as: All for the Best, or Candide or Optimism. The book reflects on the ideals of the Enlightenment at the time, and through exaggerated situations harshly satirized by Voltaire, Candide reflects the Enlightenment ideals of women’s societal role and optimism.
The few major female characters in Candide, Cunegonde, Paquette, and the Old Woman, are all of different social classes, from the daughter of a baron, a chambermaid, to a daughter of a Pope. Despite their differences in class and nationality, each woman suffered through exploitation and rape. Paquette, a chambermaid for the Baroness of Thunder-ten-Tronckh, was forced into “…this abominable trade, which appears so pleasant to you men, while to us women it is the utmost abyss of misery” (68). Voltaire’s purpose in placing her in misery is because the protagonist, Candide, and his pessimistic friend, Martin, are trying to settle a bet to see if Paquette and her husband, Friar Grioflee, are as happy as they outwardly seem. However, in this, Voltaire criticizes women’s role in society as only existing in
Voltaire is considered as one of the greatest Enlightenment writers in France for his extensive use of literary elements to convey his message. Voltaire satirizes different aspects of society to expose their absurdity in most of his writings. In Candide, Voltaire, by employing situational irony, mocks the blindness of society, magnifying the narrow-minded human nature.
In Voltaire’s Candide, the main character within the book was raised within a wealthy family. Belonging to this class, Candide did not
Candide on the surface is a witty story. However when inspected deeper it is a philippic writing against people of an uneducated status. Candide is an archetype of these idiocracies, for he lacks reason and has optimism that is truly irking, believing that this is the best of all possible worlds. Thus Voltaire uses a witty, bantering tale on the surface, but in depth a cruel bombast against the ignoramuses of his times.
Voltaire’s Candide portrays an exaggerated image of human cruelty and suffering in the world. Specifically, Voltaire criticizes people’s lack of willingness to prevent suffering, and their tendency to accept the idea that there is nothing anyone can do about human outcomes. He upholds his belief that practical ways of solving problems generate improvement. He believes that human indifference and inaction cause suffering to carry on. Voltaire’s believes that naïve optimism, absolute pessimism, cruel indifference, and lack of reason hinder positive and constructive change.
In Voltaire’s Candide, the women are constantly being victims of rape, abuse, and violence. They suffer no matter how rich or how poor they were. From Cunegonde to Paquette, and The Old Woman, none of these characters possess such importance as the male characters do. Voltaire ridicules gender roles and the lack of power these women had in the Enlightenment period, which was supposed to be a time of “intellectual freedom and equality for men and women” (Johnson)
Voltaire’s Candide can be understood in several ways by its audience. At a first glance it would appear to be simply a story blessed with outrageous creativity, but if you look deeper in to the novel, a more complicated and meaningful message is buried within. Voltaire uses the adventures of Candide as a representation of what he personally feels is wrong within in society. Written in the 18th century (1759), known commonly as the age of enlightenment, Voltaire forces his audience to consider the shift from tradition to freedom within society. He achieves this by exploring the reality of human suffering due to
In the novel Candide, Voltaire satirizes the disillusionment of optimism by depicting a multitude of hardships seen around the world. Candide, the open-minded protagonist, has been exposed to Pangloss’s optimistic philosophy for the majority of his life. However, throughout the course of the novel, it becomes increasingly difficult to see the positive side of all the catastrophe surrounding him. It is only after he starts doubting this philosophy that Candide starts to become influenced by the teachings of Martin. Although Candide resides in security at the conclusion, Voltaire draws on the disastrous events seen throughout the novel and utilizes Martin’s pessimistic point of view to claim that human nature is incomplete without suffering.
Biographical information about the author: Francois-Marie Arouet, better known as Voltaire, was born in 1694 in Paris, France. Though his father wanted him to become a lawyer, Voltaire long held a great passion for writing, and rather than going to law school, spent his time extensively composing poetry, essays, and historical studies. His widespread recognition as an author was established with the publication of the play “Oedipus”, a variation on the original Greek tragedy, in 1718. In 1726, after a fight with a French nobleman, Voltaire was exiled to England. There, he was exposed to a
Voltaire's Candide is a novel that is interspersed with superficial characters and conceptual ideas that are critically exaggerated and satirized. The parody offers cynical themes disguised by mockeries and witticism, and the story itself presents a distinctive outlook on life narrowed to the concept of free will as opposed to blind faith driven by desire for an optimistic outcome. The crucial contrast in the story deals with irrational ideas as taught to Candide about being optimistic by Pangloss, his cheerful mentor, versus reality as viewed by the rest of the world through the eyes of the troubled character, Martin. This raises the question of whether or not the notion of free will is valid due to Candide’s peculiar timing of his
In Candide Voltaire discusses the exploitation of the female race in the eighteenth century through the women in the novel. Cunegonde, Paquette, and the Old Woman suffer through rape and sexual exploitation regardless of wealth or political connections. These characters possess very little complexity or importance in Candide. With his characterization of Cunegonde, Paquette, and the Old Woman Voltaire satirizes gender roles and highlights the impotence of women in the 1800s.
In Voltaire’s Candide, we are taken by the hand through an adventure which spanned two continents, several countries, and to a multitude of adverse characters. The protagonist, Candide, became the recipient of the horrors which would be faced by any person in the 18th century. But Candide was always accompanied with fellows sufferers, two of which our focus will lay, Pangloss and Martin. In equal respects, both are embodiments of different philosophies of the time: Pangloss the proponent of Optimism and Martin the proponent of Pessimism. Each of the two travelers is never together with Candide, until the end, but both entice him to picture the world in one of their two philosophies. Throughout the story there is an apparent ebb and flow
Most of Voltaire’s characters were able to explain why they could consider themselves as the “most unhappy” by providing a story of what had occurred to them. Their experiences vary from natural to man-made misfortunes. However, even though, the characters’ reactions to their misfortunes are of a similar, the experiences between the male and female characters of Candide are quite different in regards to what is taken away from them.
Candide was a book with humor, satire, and character. Within all of these things there were also recurring themes. One of the most prominent throughout the book is the treatment of women and how the women characters of this book fared compared to the men. Candide was written in 1759, and the Enlightenment began in the 18th century. The Enlightenment was a literary movement of politics, philosophy, science, and women's equality; and these themes were carefully written into the pieces of this time. This leaves the question though, if Voltaire was an Enlightenment writer, how and why does he express his views on women’s rights this way in Candide?
This story provides us with a very un-just look on society. Candide and all the other characters in the book are put in situations where they suffer from the hands of other people. For starters, Candide is kicked out of the Baron’s castle for the simple act of kissing the girls that he loves. On his journey he is beating within an inch of his life for no good reason. It seems that people who had the money had the power and took advantage of those people who had nothing.
Throughout Voltaire’s Candide, women are often presented as being victims and are often suffering because of acts of cruelty and violence. In many senses, this does not allow them to be fully developed characters, particularly when compared to the males in the novel. From Cunegonde to the old woman, to the told experiences of other women in the text, the reader cannot help but to pick up on the theme of hatred towards females and it is worth questioning both why Candide might have chosen to present women in this manner and what this means in the context of philosophy (especially Enlightenment philosophy as seen in Candide) which seeks to free people rather than keep in specific roles. Within the opening chapters we witness the characterisation of two of its few female characters: Cunegonde and her mother’s chambermaid, Paquette.