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Theme Of Diction In Candide

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Voltaire uses the literary device of distortion throughout his novel candide. By exaggerating and satirizing the adventures of the characters, Voltaire successfully illuminates his underlying ideas about the the tyranny and persecution by the elite in the church and state that existed in 1694-1778. Through the character Candide and his adventures, Voltaire exhorts his audience to address his subversive ideas with laughter and horror and then to address the problems in the world. In Candide Voltaire successfully employs distortion through the use of diction in names and titles, imagery in the places he creates, and exaggerated characterization to express his very specific ideas about wealth, religion and human nature .

First of all, Voltaire is a master in his word choice and his clever use of distortion in the names he creates in this novel convey many levels of meaning. For instance, the main character is dubbed Candide which is derived from the latin word candidum. The many meanings of this root are "white; pure; sincere, honest, and upright.” This word choice perfectly describes the protagonist because he is the ultimate optimist. For example, Candide’s “metaphysico-theologico-cosmolo-nigology” teacher, Pangloss teaches him his philosophy for life which is “This is all for the best’(15). Candide as an open, almost gullible character absorbs all of Panglosses’ teaching without question and accepts that this is how the world it suppose to work. Candide's hyperbolic

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