Comedies

Comedies

Author: Jean Baptiste Poquelin Moliere

Publisher:

Published: 1929

Total Pages: 486

ISBN-13:

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Comedies ...: Don John, or The feast of the statue (Don Juan, au Le festin de Pierre) ; Love's the best doctor (L'amour médicin) ; Tartuffe, or The imposter (Tartuffe, ou L'imposteur) ; Squire Lubberly (Monsieur de Pourceaugnac) ; George Dandin, or The husband defeated (Georges Dandin, ou Le mari confondu) ; The cit turned gentleman (Le bourgeois gentilhomme) ; The impertinents (Les facheux) ; The learned ladies (Les femmes savantes) ; The cheats of Scapin (Les fourberies de Scapin) ; The hypochondriack (Le malade imaginaire)

Comedies ...: Don John, or The feast of the statue (Don Juan, au Le festin de Pierre) ; Love's the best doctor (L'amour médicin) ; Tartuffe, or The imposter (Tartuffe, ou L'imposteur) ; Squire Lubberly (Monsieur de Pourceaugnac) ; George Dandin, or The husband defeated (Georges Dandin, ou Le mari confondu) ; The cit turned gentleman (Le bourgeois gentilhomme) ; The impertinents (Les facheux) ; The learned ladies (Les femmes savantes) ; The cheats of Scapin (Les fourberies de Scapin) ; The hypochondriack (Le malade imaginaire)

Author: Molière

Publisher:

Published: 1929

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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The Public Mirror

The Public Mirror

Author: Larry F. Norman

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2010-08-15

Total Pages: 235

ISBN-13: 0226591530

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Though much beloved and widely produced, Molière's satirical comedies pose a problem for those reading or staging his works today: how can a genre associated with biting caricature and castigation deliver engaging theater? Instead of simply dismissing social satire as a foundation for Molière's theater, as many have done, Larry F. Norman takes seriously Molière's claim that his satires are first and foremost effective theater. Pairing close readings of Molière's comedies with insightful accounts of French social history and aesthetics, Norman shows how Molière conceived of satire as a "public mirror" provoking dynamic exchange and conflict with audience members obsessed with their own images. Drawing on these tensions, Molière portrays characters satirizing one another on stage, with their reactions providing dramatic conflict and propelling comic dialogue. By laying bare his society's system of imagining itself, Molière's satires both enthralled and enraged his original audience and provide us with a crucial key to the classical culture of representation.