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Papers On French Literature
Page 35 of 38
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THE ROLE OF DR. PANGLOSS AND MARTIN IN VOLTAIRE’S CANDIDE
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This 3 page paper discusses the roles that Martin, Dr. Pangloss and Martin play in Voltaire's Candide.Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: MBpngloss.rtf
The Romanticism Of Voltaire's Candide
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The age of Enlightenment had as
its heir the era of Romanticism. Voltaire was known as an author of the
Enlightenment, however, he also utilized the basic premises of
Romanticism. This 7 page paper argues that there are two major elements
of Candide that define it as romantic adventure rather than classical
hero: the use of satire for comedic effect and the 'quest' for love.
Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: KTcndide.wps
The Roots of Capitalism in Shakespeare and Mandeville
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A 9 page paper discussing The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare and The Fable of the Bees by Bernard de Mandeville. The paper shows how the development of capitalism has had roots in distinctly non-capitalist values. No sources except books.
Filename: Venice.doc
The Story Of The Eye And The Philosophy Of Georges Bataille
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A 5 page analysis of the novel by Georges Bataille The Story of the Eye, with reference to Bataille's non-fiction work L'Erostisme. The writer relates how scholars feel that this sexually explicit novel is meant to be read as an extended poem. Imagery and metaphor are discussed although the writer disagrees with Bataille's argument that eroticism is intrinsically tied to violence and death. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: Storyeye.wps
The Struggle for Human Meaning in Albert Camus’ “The Plague”
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This is a 6 page paper discussing the struggle for human meaning in Albert Camus’ “The Plague”. Albert Camus in “The Plague” chronicles the struggle for human meaning in the face of a disenchanted world through the plight of social disintegration, the spread of political manipulation, and the crisis of metaphysical reason and morality. Although Camus states that this work was not one of morality, the struggle for human meaning during the epidemic plague in Oran in the 1940s involves the characters questioning the breakdown of their social and political systems in which they are imprisoned in their own village. During the plague which seems to have no reason in who is killed and who is spared, the characters also struggle to apply some sort of metaphysical sense to the plague. While the village eventually overcomes the plague, Rieux and Tarrou remind the readers that the plague never truly disappears and that everyone contains aspects of the plague; a reminder to the reader that in times of a chaos, human reasoning does not apply.
Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: TJCamus1.rtf
THE THEME OF ‘FREEDOM’ IN JULES VERN’S 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA
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This 5 page paper discusses the theme of freedom in the novle, Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea by Jules Vern. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: MBnemo.rtf
The Theme of Courtly Love in “Beowulf,” “The Romance of Tristan,”
“Troilus and Criseyde,” and “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”
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This 6 page report discusses four classic works of the medieval
timeframe and the concept of courtly love. Chaucer’s Troilus and
Criseyde, Beroul’s The Romance of Tristan, Sir Gawain and the
Green Knight by the mysterious “Gawain-Poet,” and Beowulf each
shows the reader that it is important to understand that it was
the subjective presentation of either the lovers’ ardor for one
another and their concern regarding other people in their lives
that essentially reconstructed the code of courtly love into what
ultimately became one of the most important influences in Western
literature. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: BWcourt5.wps
The Theme of Deception in Medieval French Literature
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This 7
page report discusses the ways in which French literature of the
Middle Ages used a theme of deception to demonstrate the sanctity
of certain characters in terms of their devotion to God, ideals,
and love. Each of the stories discussed -- The Life of St.
Alexis, Yvain, and The Romance of Silence -- demonstrate the
impact on one’s own life that deception can cause, as well as the
ways in which it can serve certain meaningful purposes.
Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: BWfrlit.wps
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