Moliere: The Theory and Practice of Comedy
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #648909 in Books
- Published on: 1996-07
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 258 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
This book provides a practical and historical analysis of Moliere's comedies. Andrew Calder presents evidence and analysis to help modern readers to share the perspectives of the playwright's contemporaries. Chapter 1 to 10 define the mechanisms of comic drama, and offer answers to such questions as : what is a comic character? how does it function dramatically? how does it differ from a tragic character? what comic uses does Moliere make of domestic settings, of family relationships, of "raisonneurs", servants, tyrannical parents and young lovers? what is the relationship of the character on stage to the world outside the text...to reader and audience? The nature and functions of plot and action, of reason, the ridiculous, judgment, laughter and excessive self-love are explored. Later chapters describe the satirical and historical settings of the major plays. All of Moliere's plays are discussed, but "L'ecole des femmes", "Le tartuffe", "Don Juan", "Le misanthrope", "L'avare", "Le bourgeois gentilhomme", "Les femmes savantes" and "Le malade imaginaire" are analyzed in particular detail.
Customer Reviews
Perfect guide for the teaching of A level French literature
This is a most useful book. As a teacher of French literature to A level, this has been a vital text. It is certainly very easy to use and is a book that can be 'dipped into'. Chapters can be perused on their own merit with regard to either individual plays or specific themes. The detail is abundant and Calder has a warm and totally humane take the timeless character types of Moliere, so visible today as ever they were in the 17th century.

![Moliere [2007]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/510sF3fW68L._SL75_.jpg)

