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The Role Of Women In Voltaire's Candide

Decent Essays

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

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