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Candide

Candide, ou l'Optimisme (/kɒnˈdd/ kon-DEED,[5] French: [kɑ̃did] ) is a French satire written by Voltaire, a philosopher of the Age of Enlightenment,[6] first published in 1759. The novella has been widely translated, with English versions titled Candide: or, All for the Best (1759); Candide: or, The Optimist (1762); and Candide: Optimism (1947).[7] It begins with a young man, Candide, who is living a sheltered life in an Edenic paradise and being indoctrinated with Leibnizian optimism by his mentor, Professor Pangloss.[8] The work describes the abrupt cessation of this lifestyle, followed by Candide's slow and painful disillusionment as he witnesses and experiences great hardships in the world. Voltaire concludes Candide with, if not rejecting Leibnizian optimism outright, advocating a deeply practical precept, "we must cultivate our garden", in lieu of the Leibnizian mantra of Pangloss, "all is for the best" in the "best of all possible worlds".

Candide
The title-page of the 1759 edition published by Cramer in Geneva, which reads, "Candide, or Optimism, translated from the German of Dr. Ralph."[1][2]
AuthorVoltaire
Original titleCandide, ou l'Optimisme
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Genre
Publisher1759: Cramer, Marc-Michel Rey, Jean Nourse, Lambert, and others
Publication date
January 1759[3][4]

Candide is characterized by its tone as well as by its erratic, fantastical, and fast-moving plot. A picaresque novel with a story similar to that of a more serious coming-of-age narrative (bildungsroman), it parodies many adventure and romance clichés, the struggles of which are caricatured in a tone that is bitter and matter-of-fact. Still, the events discussed are often based on historical happenings, such as the Seven Years' War and the 1755 Lisbon earthquake.[9] As philosophers of Voltaire's day contended with the problem of evil, so does Candide in this short theological novel, albeit more directly and humorously. Voltaire ridicules religion, theologians, governments, armies, philosophies, and philosophers. Through Candide, he assaults Leibniz and his optimism.[10][11]

Candide has enjoyed both great success and great scandal. Immediately after its secretive publication, the book was widely banned because it contained religious blasphemy, political sedition, and intellectual hostility hidden under a thin veil of naivety.[10] However, with its sharp wit and insightful portrayal of the human condition, the novel has since inspired many later authors and artists to mimic and adapt it. Today, Candide is considered Voltaire's magnum opus[10] and is often listed as part of the Western canon. It is among the most frequently taught works of French literature.[12] The British poet and literary critic Martin Seymour-Smith listed Candide as one of the 100 most influential books ever written.

Historical and literary background Edit

A number of historical events inspired Voltaire to write Candide, most notably the publication of Leibniz's "Monadology" (a short metaphysical treatise), the Seven Years' War, and the 1755 Lisbon earthquake. Both of the latter catastrophes are frequently referred to in Candide and are cited by scholars as reasons for its composition.[13] The 1755 Lisbon earthquake, tsunami, and resulting fires of All Saints' Day had a strong influence on theologians of the day and on Voltaire, who was himself disillusioned by them. The earthquake had an especially large effect on the contemporary doctrine of optimism, a philosophical system founded on the theodicy of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, which insisted on God's benevolence in spite of such events. This concept is often put in the form, "all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds" (French: Tout est pour le mieux dans le meilleur des mondes possibles). Philosophers had trouble fitting the horrors of this earthquake into their optimistic world view.[14]

 
This 1755 copper engraving shows the ruins of Lisbon in flames and a tsunami overwhelming the ships in the harbour.

Voltaire actively rejected Leibnizian optimism after the natural disaster, convinced that if this were the best possible world, it should surely be better than it is.[15] In both Candide and Poème sur le désastre de Lisbonne ("Poem on the Lisbon Disaster"), Voltaire attacks this optimist belief.[14] He makes use of the Lisbon earthquake in both Candide and his Poème to argue this point, sarcastically describing the catastrophe as one of the most horrible disasters "in the best of all possible worlds".[16] Immediately after the earthquake, unreliable rumours circulated around Europe, sometimes overestimating the severity of the event. Ira Wade, a noted expert on Voltaire and Candide, has analyzed which sources Voltaire might have referenced in learning of the event. Wade speculates that Voltaire's primary source for information on the Lisbon earthquake was the 1755 work Relation historique du Tremblement de Terre survenu à Lisbonne by Ange Goudar.[17]

Apart from such events, contemporaneous stereotypes of the German personality may have been a source of inspiration for the text, as they were for Simplicius Simplicissimus,[18] a 1669 satirical picaresque novel written by Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen and inspired by the Thirty Years' War. The protagonist of this novel, who was supposed to embody stereotypically German characteristics, is quite similar to the protagonist of Candide.[2] These stereotypes, according to Voltaire biographer Alfred Owen Aldridge, include "extreme credulousness or sentimental simplicity", two of Candide's and Simplicius's defining qualities. Aldridge writes, "Since Voltaire admitted familiarity with fifteenth-century German authors who used a bold and buffoonish style, it is quite possible that he knew Simplicissimus as well."[2]

A satirical and parodic precursor of Candide, Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels (1726) is one of Candide's closest literary relatives. This satire tells the story of "a gullible ingenue", Gulliver, who (like Candide) travels to several "remote nations" and is hardened by the many misfortunes which befall him. As evidenced by similarities between the two books, Voltaire probably drew upon Gulliver's Travels for inspiration while writing Candide.[19] Other probable sources of inspiration for Candide are Télémaque (1699) by François Fénelon and Cosmopolite (1753) by Louis-Charles Fougeret de Monbron. Candide's parody of the bildungsroman is probably based on Télémaque, which includes the prototypical parody of the tutor on whom Pangloss may have been partly based. Likewise, Monbron's protagonist undergoes a disillusioning series of travels similar to those of Candide.[2][20][21]

Creation Edit

Born François-Marie Arouet, Voltaire (1694–1778), by the time of the Lisbon earthquake, was already a well-established author, known for his satirical wit. He had been made a member of the Académie Française in 1746. He was a deist, a strong proponent of religious freedom, and a critic of tyrannical governments. Candide became part of his large, diverse body of philosophical, political, and artistic works expressing these views.[22][23] More specifically, it was a model for the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century novels called the contes philosophiques. This genre, of which Voltaire was one of the founders, included previous works of his such as Zadig and Micromegas.[24][25][26]

 
Engraving of Voltaire published as the frontispiece to an 1843 edition of his Dictionnaire philosophique

It is unknown exactly when Voltaire wrote Candide,[27] but scholars estimate that it was primarily composed in late 1758 and begun as early as 1757.[28] Voltaire is believed to have written a portion of it while living at Les Délices near Geneva and also while visiting Charles Théodore, the Elector-Palatinate, at Schwetzingen for three weeks in the summer of 1758. Despite solid evidence for these claims, a popular legend persists that Voltaire wrote Candide in three days. This idea is probably based on a misreading of the 1885 work La Vie intime de Voltaire aux Délices et à Ferney by Lucien Perey (real name: Clara Adèle Luce Herpin) and Gaston Maugras.[29][30] The evidence indicates strongly that Voltaire did not rush or improvise Candide, but worked on it over a significant period of time, possibly even a whole year. Candide is mature and carefully developed, not impromptu, as the intentionally choppy plot and the aforementioned myth might suggest.[31]

There is only one extant manuscript of Candide that was written before the work's 1759 publication; it was discovered in 1956 by Wade and since named the La Vallière Manuscript. It is believed to have been sent, chapter by chapter, by Voltaire to the Duke and Duchess La Vallière in the autumn of 1758.[4] The manuscript was sold to the Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal in the late eighteenth century, where it remained undiscovered for almost two hundred years.[32] The La Vallière Manuscript, the most original and authentic of all surviving copies of Candide, was probably dictated by Voltaire to his secretary, Jean-Louis Wagnière, then edited directly.[29][33] In addition to this manuscript, there is believed to have been another, one copied by Wagnière for the Elector Charles-Théodore, who hosted Voltaire during the summer of 1758. The existence of this copy was first postulated by Norman L. Torrey in 1929. If it exists, it remains undiscovered.[29][34]

Voltaire published Candide simultaneously in five countries no later than 15 January 1759, although the exact date is uncertain.[4][35] Seventeen versions of Candide from 1759, in the original French, are known today, and there has been great controversy over which is the earliest.[4] More versions were published in other languages: Candide was translated once into Italian and thrice into English that same year.[3] The complicated science of calculating the relative publication dates of all of the versions of Candide is described at length in Wade's article "The First Edition of Candide: A Problem of Identification". The publication process was extremely secretive, probably the "most clandestine work of the century", because of the book's obviously illicit and irreverent content.[36] The greatest number of copies of Candide were published concurrently in Geneva by Cramer, in Amsterdam by Marc-Michel Rey, in London by Jean Nourse, and in Paris by Lambert.[36]

 
1803 illustration of the two monkeys chasing their lovers. Candide shoots the monkeys, thinking they are attacking the women.

Candide underwent one major revision after its initial publication, in addition to some minor ones. In 1761, a version of Candide was published that included, along with several minor changes, a major addition by Voltaire to the twenty-second chapter, a section that had been thought weak by the Duke of Vallière.[37] The English title of this edition was Candide, or Optimism, Translated from the German of Dr. Ralph. With the additions found in the Doctor's pocket when he died at Minden, in the Year of Grace 1759.[38] The last edition of Candide authorised by Voltaire was the one included in Cramer's 1775 edition of his complete works, known as l'édition encadrée, in reference to the border or frame around each page.[39][40]

Voltaire strongly opposed the inclusion of illustrations in his works, as he stated in a 1778 letter to the writer and publisher Charles Joseph Panckoucke:

Je crois que des Estampes seraient fort inutiles. Ces colifichets n'ont jamais été admis dans les éditions de Cicéron, de Virgile et d'Horace. (I believe that these illustrations would be quite useless. These baubles have never been allowed in the works of Cicero, Virgil and Horace.)[41]

Despite this protest, two sets of illustrations for Candide were produced by the French artist Jean-Michel Moreau le Jeune. The first version was done, at Moreau's own expense, in 1787 and included in Kehl's publication of that year, Oeuvres Complètes de Voltaire.[42] Four images were drawn by Moreau for this edition and were engraved by Pierre-Charles Baquoy.[43] The second version, in 1803, consisted of seven drawings by Moreau which were transposed by multiple engravers.[44] The twentieth-century modern artist Paul Klee stated that it was while reading Candide that he discovered his own artistic style. Klee illustrated the work, and his drawings were published in a 1920 version edited by Kurt Wolff.[45]

List of characters Edit

Main characters Edit

  • Candide: The title character. The illegitimate son of the sister of the Baron of Thunder-ten-Tronckh. In love with Cunégonde.
  • Cunégonde: The daughter of the Baron of Thunder-ten-Tronckh. In love with Candide.
  • Professor Pangloss: The royal educator of the court of the baron. Described as "the greatest philosopher of the Holy Roman Empire".
  • The Old Woman: Cunégonde's maid while she is the mistress of Don Issachar and the Grand Inquisitor of Portugal. Flees with Candide and Cunégonde to the New World. Illegitimate daughter of Pope Urban X.
  • Cacambo: From a Spanish father and a Peruvian mother. Lived half his life in Spain and half in Latin America. Candide's valet while in America.
  • Martin: Dutch amateur philosopher and Manichaean. Meets Candide in Suriname, travels with him afterwards.
  • The Baron of Thunder-ten-Tronckh: Brother of Cunégonde. Is seemingly killed by the Bulgarians, but becomes a Jesuit in Paraguay. Disapproves of Candide and Cunégonde's marriage.

Secondary characters Edit

  • The baron and baroness of Thunder-ten-Tronckh: Father and mother of Cunégonde and the second baron. Both slain by the Bulgarians.
  • The king of the Bulgarians.
  • Jacques the Anabaptist: Saves Candide from a lynching in the Netherlands. Drowns in the port of Lisbon after saving another sailor's life.
  • Don Issachar: Jewish landlord in Portugal. Cunégonde becomes his mistress, shared with the Grand Inquisitor of Portugal. Killed by Candide.
  • The Grand Inquisitor of Portugal: Sentences Candide and Pangloss at the auto-da-fé. Cunégonde is his mistress jointly with Don Issachar. Killed by Candide.
  • Don Fernando d'Ibarra y Figueroa y Mascarenes y Lampourdos y Souza: Spanish governor of Buenos Aires. Wants Cunégonde as a mistress.
  • The king of El Dorado, who helps Candide and Cacambo out of El Dorado, lets them pick gold from the grounds, and makes them rich.
  • Mynheer Vanderdendur: Dutch ship captain. Offers to take Candide from America to France for 30,000 gold coins, but then departs without him, stealing most of his riches.
  • The abbot of Périgord: Befriends Candide and Martin, leads the police to arrest them; he and the police officer accept three diamonds each and release them.
  • The marchioness of Parolignac: Parisian wench who takes an elaborate title.
  • The scholar: One of the guests of the "marchioness". Argues with Candide about art.
  • Paquette: A chambermaid from Thunder-ten-Tronckh who gave Pangloss syphilis. After the slaying by the Bulgarians, works as a prostitute and becomes the property of Friar Giroflée.
  • Friar Giroflée: Theatine friar. In love with the prostitute Paquette.
  • Signor Pococurante: A Venetian noble. Candide and Martin visit his estate, where he discusses his disdain of most of the canon of great art.
  • In an inn in Venice, Candide and Martin dine with six men who turn out to be deposed monarchs:

Synopsis Edit

Candide contains thirty episodic chapters, which may be grouped into two main schemes: one consists of two divisions, separated by the protagonist's hiatus in El Dorado; the other consists of three parts, each defined by its geographical setting. By the former scheme, the first half of Candide constitutes the rising action and the last part the resolution. This view is supported by the strong theme of travel and quest, reminiscent of adventure and picaresque novels, which tend to employ such a dramatic structure.[46] By the latter scheme, the thirty chapters may be grouped into three parts each comprising ten chapters and defined by locale: I–X are set in Europe, XI–XX are set in the Americas, and XXI–XXX are set in Europe and the Ottoman Empire.[47][48] The plot summary that follows uses this second format and includes Voltaire's additions of 1761.

Chapters I–X Edit

The tale of Candide begins in the castle of the Baron Thunder-ten-Tronckh in Westphalia, home to the Baron's daughter, Lady Cunégonde; his bastard nephew, Candide; a tutor, Pangloss; a chambermaid, Paquette; and the rest of the Baron's family. The protagonist, Candide, is romantically attracted to Cunégonde. He is a young man of "the most unaffected simplicity" (l'esprit le plus simple), whose face is "the true index of his mind" (sa physionomie annonçait son âme).[2] Dr. Pangloss, professor of "métaphysico-théologo-cosmolonigologie" (English: "metaphysico-theologo-cosmolonigology") and self-proclaimed optimist, teaches his pupils that they live in the "best of all possible worlds" and that "all is for the best".

 
Frontispiece and first page of chapter one of an early English translation by T. Smollett (et al.) of Voltaire's Candide, London, printed for J. Newbery (et al.), 1762.

All is well in the castle until Cunégonde sees Pangloss sexually engaged with Paquette in some bushes. Encouraged by this show of affection, Cunégonde drops her handkerchief next to Candide, enticing him to kiss her. For this infraction, Candide is evicted from the castle, at which point he is captured by Bulgar (Prussian) recruiters and coerced into military service, where he is flogged, nearly executed, and forced to participate in a major battle between the Bulgars and the Avars (an allegory representing the Prussians and the French). Candide eventually escapes the army and makes his way to Holland where he is given aid by Jacques, an Anabaptist, who strengthens Candide's optimism. Soon after, Candide finds his master Pangloss, now a beggar with syphilis. Pangloss reveals he was infected with this disease by Paquette and shocks Candide by relating how Castle Thunder-ten-Tronckh was destroyed by Bulgars, that Cunégonde and her whole family were killed, and that Cunégonde was raped before her death. Pangloss is cured of his illness by Jacques, losing one eye and one ear in the process, and the three set sail to Lisbon.

In Lisbon's harbor, they are overtaken by a vicious storm which destroys the boat. Jacques attempts to save a sailor, and in the process is thrown overboard.[49] The sailor makes no move to help the drowning Jacques, and Candide is in a state of despair until Pangloss explains to him that Lisbon harbor was created in order for Jacques to drown. Only Pangloss, Candide, and the "brutish sailor" who let Jacques drown[50] survive the wreck and reach Lisbon, which is promptly hit by an earthquake, tsunami, and fire that kill tens of thousands. The sailor leaves in order to loot the rubble while Candide, injured and begging for help, is lectured on the optimistic view of the situation by Pangloss.

The next day, Pangloss discusses his optimistic philosophy with a member of the Portuguese Inquisition, and he and Candide are arrested for heresy, set to be tortured and killed in an "auto-da-fé" set up to appease God and prevent another disaster. Candide is flogged and sees Pangloss hanged, but another earthquake intervenes and he escapes. He is approached by an old woman,[51] who leads him to a house where Lady Cunégonde waits, alive. Candide is surprised: Pangloss had told him that Cunégonde had been raped and disemboweled. She had been, but Cunégonde points out that people survive such things. However, her rescuer sold her to a Jewish merchant, Don Issachar, who was then threatened by a corrupt Grand Inquisitor into sharing her (Don Issachar gets Cunégonde on Mondays, Wednesdays, and the sabbath day). Her owners arrive, find her with another man, and Candide kills them both. Candide and the two women flee the city, heading to the Americas.[52] Along the way, Cunégonde falls into self-pity, complaining of all the misfortunes that have befallen her.

Chapters XI–XX Edit

The old woman reciprocates by revealing her own tragic life: born the daughter of Pope Urban X and the Princess of Palestrina, she was kidnapped and enslaved by Barbary pirates, witnessed violent civil wars in Morocco under the bloodthirsty King Moulay Ismaïl (during which her mother was drawn and quartered), suffered constant hunger, nearly died from a plague in Algiers, and had a buttock cut off to feed starving Janissaries during the Russian capture of Azov. After traversing all the Russian Empire, she eventually became a servant of Don Issachar and met Cunégonde.

The trio arrives in Buenos Aires, where Governor Don Fernando d'Ibarra y Figueroa y Mascarenes y Lampourdos y Souza asks to marry Cunégonde. Just then, an alcalde (a Spanish magistrate) arrives, pursuing Candide for killing the Grand Inquisitor. Leaving the women behind, Candide flees to Paraguay with his practical and heretofore unmentioned manservant, Cacambo.

 
1787 illustration of Candide and Cacambo meeting a maimed slave from a sugarcane mill near Suriname.

At a border post on the way to Paraguay, Cacambo and Candide speak to the commandant, who turns out to be Cunégonde's unnamed brother. He explains that after his family was slaughtered, the Jesuits' preparation for his burial revived him, and he has since joined the order.[52] When Candide proclaims he intends to marry Cunégonde, her brother attacks him, and Candide runs him through with his rapier. After lamenting all the people (mainly priests) he has killed, he and Cacambo flee. In their flight, Candide and Cacambo come across two naked women being chased and bitten by a pair of monkeys. Candide, seeking to protect the women, shoots and kills the monkeys, but is informed by Cacambo that the monkeys and women were probably lovers.

Cacambo and Candide are captured by Oreillons, or Orejones; members of the Inca nobility who widened the lobes of their ears, and are depicted here as the fictional inhabitants of the area. Mistaking Candide for a Jesuit by his robes, the Oreillons prepare to cook Candide and Cacambo; however, Cacambo convinces the Oreillons that Candide killed a Jesuit to procure the robe. Cacambo and Candide are released and travel for a month on foot and then down a river by canoe, living on fruits and berries.[53]

After a few more adventures, Candide and Cacambo wander into El Dorado, a geographically isolated utopia where the streets are covered with precious stones, there exist no priests, and all of the king's jokes are funny.[54] Candide and Cacambo stay a month in El Dorado, but Candide is still in pain without Cunégonde, and expresses to the king his wish to leave. The king points out that this is a foolish idea, but generously helps them do so. The pair continue their journey, now accompanied by one hundred red pack sheep carrying provisions and incredible sums of money, which they slowly lose or have stolen over the next few adventures.

Candide and Cacambo eventually reach Suriname where they split up: Cacambo travels to Buenos Aires to retrieve Lady Cunégonde, while Candide prepares to travel to Europe to await the two. Candide's remaining sheep are stolen, and Candide is fined heavily by a Dutch magistrate for petulance over the theft. Before leaving Suriname, Candide feels in need of companionship, so he interviews a number of local men who have been through various ill-fortunes and settles on a man named Martin.

Chapters XXI–XXX Edit

This companion, Martin, is a Manichaean scholar based on the real-life pessimist Pierre Bayle, who was a chief opponent of Leibniz.[55] For the remainder of the voyage, Martin and Candide argue about philosophy, Martin painting the entire world as occupied by fools. Candide, however, remains an optimist at heart, since it is all he knows. After a detour to Bordeaux and Paris, they arrive in England and see an admiral (based on Admiral Byng) being shot for not killing enough of the enemy. Martin explains that Britain finds it necessary to shoot an admiral from time to time "pour encourager les autres" (to encourage the others).[56] Candide, horrified, arranges for them to leave Britain immediately. Upon their arrival in Venice, Candide and Martin meet Paquette, the chambermaid who infected Pangloss with his syphilis. She is now a prostitute, and is spending her time with a Theatine monk, Brother Giroflée. Although both appear happy on the surface, they reveal their despair: Paquette has led a miserable existence as a sexual object, and the monk detests the religious order in which he was indoctrinated. Candide gives two thousand piastres to Paquette and one thousand to Brother Giroflée.

Candide and Martin visit the Lord Pococurante, a noble Venetian. That evening, Cacambo—now a slave—arrives and informs Candide that Cunégonde is in Constantinople. Prior to their departure, Candide and Martin dine with six strangers who had come for the Carnival of Venice. These strangers are revealed to be dethroned kings: the Ottoman Sultan Ahmed III, Emperor Ivan VI of Russia, Charles Edward Stuart (an unsuccessful pretender to the English throne), Augustus III of Poland (deprived, at the time of writing, of his reign in the Electorate of Saxony due to the Seven Years' War), Stanisław Leszczyński, and Theodore of Corsica.

On the way to Constantinople, Cacambo reveals that Cunégonde—now horribly ugly—currently washes dishes on the banks of the Propontis as a slave for a Transylvanian prince by the name of Rákóczi. After arriving at the Bosphorus, they board a galley where, to Candide's surprise, he finds Pangloss and Cunégonde's brother among the rowers. Candide buys their freedom and further passage at steep prices.[52] They both relate how they survived, but despite the horrors he has been through, Pangloss's optimism remains unshaken: "I still hold to my original opinions, because, after all, I'm a philosopher, and it wouldn't be proper for me to recant, since Leibniz cannot be wrong, and since pre-established harmony is the most beautiful thing in the world, along with the plenum and subtle matter."[57]

Candide, the baron, Pangloss, Martin, and Cacambo arrive at the banks of the Propontis, where they rejoin Cunégonde and the old woman. Cunégonde has indeed become hideously ugly, but Candide nevertheless buys their freedom and marries Cunégonde to spite her brother, who forbids Cunégonde from marrying anyone but a baron of the Empire (he is secretly sold back into slavery). Paquette and Brother Giroflée—having squandered their three thousand piastres—are reconciled with Candide on a small farm (une petite métairie) which he just bought with the last of his finances.

One day, the protagonists seek out a dervish known as a great philosopher of the land. Candide asks him why Man is made to suffer so, and what they all ought to do. The dervish responds by asking rhetorically why Candide is concerned about the existence of evil and good. The dervish describes human beings as mice on a ship sent by a king to Egypt; their comfort does not matter to the king. The dervish then slams his door on the group. Returning to their farm, Candide, Pangloss, and Martin meet a Turk whose philosophy is to devote his life only to simple work and not concern himself with external affairs. He and his four children cultivate a small area of land, and the work keeps them "free of three great evils: boredom, vice, and poverty."[58] Candide, Pangloss, Martin, Cunégonde, Paquette, Cacambo, the old woman, and Brother Giroflée all set to work on this "commendable plan" (louable dessein) on their farm, each exercising his or her own talents. Candide ignores Pangloss's insistence that all turned out for the best by necessity, instead telling him "we must cultivate our garden" (il faut cultiver notre jardin).[58]

Style Edit

As Voltaire himself described it, the purpose of Candide was to "bring amusement to a small number of men of wit".[2] The author achieves this goal by combining wit with a parody of the classic adventure-romance plot. Candide is confronted with horrible events described in painstaking detail so often that it becomes humorous. Literary theorist Frances K. Barasch described Voltaire's matter-of-fact narrative as treating topics such as mass death "as coolly as a weather report".[59] The fast-paced and improbable plot—in which characters narrowly escape death repeatedly, for instance—allows for compounding tragedies to befall the same characters over and over again.[60] In the end, Candide is primarily, as described by Voltaire's biographer Ian Davidson, "short, light, rapid and humorous".[10][61]

Behind the playful façade of Candide which has amused so many, there lies very harsh criticism of contemporary European civilization which angered many others. European governments such as France, Prussia, Portugal and England are each attacked ruthlessly by the author: the French and Prussians for the Seven Years' War, the Portuguese for their Inquisition, and the British for the execution of John Byng. Organised religion, too, is harshly treated in Candide. For example, Voltaire mocks the Jesuit order of the Roman Catholic Church. Aldridge provides a characteristic example of such anti-clerical passages for which the work was banned: while in Paraguay, Cacambo remarks, "[The Jesuits] are masters of everything, and the people have no money at all …". Here, Voltaire suggests the Christian mission in Paraguay is taking advantage of the local population. Voltaire depicts the Jesuits holding the indigenous peoples as slaves while they claim to be helping them.[62][63]

Satire Edit

The main method of Candide's satire is to contrast ironically great tragedy and comedy.[10] The story does not invent or exaggerate evils of the world—it displays real ones starkly, allowing Voltaire to simplify subtle philosophies and cultural traditions, highlighting their flaws.[60] Thus Candide derides optimism, for instance, with a deluge of horrible, historical (or at least plausible) events with no apparent redeeming qualities.[2][59]

A simple example of the satire of Candide is seen in the treatment of the historic event witnessed by Candide and Martin in Portsmouth harbour. There, the duo spy an anonymous admiral, supposed to represent John Byng, being executed for failing to properly engage a French fleet. The admiral is blindfolded and shot on the deck of his own ship, merely "to encourage the others" (French: pour encourager les autres, an expression Voltaire is credited with originating). This depiction of military punishment trivializes Byng's death. The dry, pithy explanation "to encourage the others" thus satirises a serious historical event in characteristically Voltairian fashion. For its classic wit, this phrase has become one of the more often quoted from Candide.[10][64]

Voltaire depicts the worst of the world and his pathetic hero's desperate effort to fit it into an optimistic outlook. Almost all of Candide is a discussion of various forms of evil: its characters rarely find even temporary respite. There is at least one notable exception: the episode of El Dorado, a fantastic village in which the inhabitants are simply rational, and their society is just and reasonable. The positivity of El Dorado may be contrasted with the pessimistic attitude of most of the book. Even in this case, the bliss of El Dorado is fleeting: Candide soon leaves the village to seek Cunégonde, whom he eventually marries only out of a sense of obligation.[2][59]

Another element of the satire focuses on what William F. Bottiglia, author of many published works on Candide, calls the "sentimental foibles of the age" and Voltaire's attack on them.[65] Flaws in European culture are highlighted as Candide parodies adventure and romance clichés, mimicking the style of a picaresque novel.[65][66] A number of archetypal characters thus have recognisable manifestations in Voltaire's work: Candide is supposed to be the drifting rogue of low social class, Cunégonde the sex interest, Pangloss the knowledgeable mentor, and Cacambo the skillful valet.[2] As the plot unfolds, readers find that Candide is no rogue, Cunégonde becomes ugly and Pangloss is a stubborn fool. The characters of Candide are unrealistic, two-dimensional, mechanical, and even marionette-like; they are simplistic and stereotypical.[67] As the initially naïve protagonist eventually comes to a mature conclusion—however noncommittal—the novella is a bildungsroman, if not a very serious one.[2][68]

Garden motif Edit

Gardens are thought by many critics to play a critical symbolic role in Candide. The first location commonly identified as a garden is the castle of the Baron, from which Candide and Cunégonde are evicted much in the same fashion as Adam and Eve are evicted from the Garden of Eden in the Book of Genesis. Cyclically, the main characters of Candide conclude the novel in a garden of their own making, one which might represent celestial paradise. The third most prominent "garden" is El Dorado, which may be a false Eden.[69] Other possibly symbolic gardens include the Jesuit pavilion, the garden of Pococurante, Cacambo's garden, and the Turk's garden.[70]

These gardens are probably references to the Garden of Eden, but it has also been proposed, by Bottiglia, for example, that the gardens refer also to the Encyclopédie, and that Candide's conclusion to cultivate "his garden" symbolises Voltaire's great support for this endeavour. Candide and his companions, as they find themselves at the end of the novella, are in a very similar position to Voltaire's tightly knit philosophical circle which supported the Encyclopédie: the main characters of Candide live in seclusion to "cultivate [their] garden", just as Voltaire suggested his colleagues leave society to write. In addition, there is evidence in the epistolary correspondence of Voltaire that he had elsewhere used the metaphor of gardening to describe writing the Encyclopédie.[70] Another interpretative possibility is that Candide cultivating "his garden" suggests his engaging in only necessary occupations, such as feeding oneself and fighting boredom. This is analogous to Voltaire's own view on gardening: he was himself a gardener at his estates in Les Délices and Ferney, and he often wrote in his correspondence that gardening was an important pastime of his own, it being an extraordinarily effective way to keep busy.[71][72][73]

Philosophy Edit

Optimism Edit

Candide satirises various philosophical and religious theories that Voltaire had previously criticised. Primary among these is Leibnizian optimism (sometimes called Panglossianism after its fictional proponent), which Voltaire ridicules with descriptions of seemingly endless calamity.[10] Voltaire demonstrates a variety of irredeemable evils in the world, leading many critics to contend that Voltaire's treatment of evil—specifically the theological problem of its existence—is the focus of the work.[74] Heavily referenced in the text are the Lisbon earthquake, disease, and the sinking of ships in storms. Also, war, thievery, and murder—evils of human design—are explored as extensively in Candide as are environmental ills. Bottiglia notes Voltaire is "comprehensive" in his enumeration of the world's evils. He is unrelenting in attacking Leibnizian optimism.[75]

Fundamental to Voltaire's attack is Candide's tutor Pangloss, a self-proclaimed follower of Leibniz and a teacher of his doctrine. Ridicule of Pangloss's theories thus ridicules Leibniz himself, and Pangloss's reasoning is silly at best. For example, Pangloss's first teachings of the narrative absurdly mix up cause and effect:

Il est démontré, disait-il, que les choses ne peuvent être autrement; car tout étant fait pour une fin, tout est nécessairement pour la meilleure fin. Remarquez bien que les nez ont été faits pour porter des lunettes; aussi avons-nous des lunettes.

It is demonstrable that things cannot be otherwise than as they are; for as all things have been created for some end, they must necessarily be created for the best end. Observe, for instance, the nose is formed for spectacles, therefore we wear spectacles.[76]

Following such flawed reasoning even more doggedly than Candide, Pangloss defends optimism. Whatever their horrendous fortune, Pangloss reiterates "all is for the best" ("Tout est pour le mieux") and proceeds to "justify" the evil event's occurrence. A characteristic example of such theodicy is found in Pangloss's explanation of why it is good that syphilis exists:

c'était une chose indispensable dans le meilleur des mondes, un ingrédient nécessaire; car si Colomb n'avait pas attrapé dans une île de l'Amérique cette maladie qui empoisonne la source de la génération, qui souvent même empêche la génération, et qui est évidemment l'opposé du grand but de la nature, nous n'aurions ni le chocolat ni la cochenille;

it was a thing unavoidable, a necessary ingredient in the best of worlds; for if Columbus had not caught in an island in America this disease, which contaminates the source of generation, and frequently impedes propagation itself, and is evidently opposed to the great end of nature, we should have had neither chocolate nor cochineal.[50]

Candide, the impressionable and incompetent student of Pangloss, often tries to justify evil, fails, invokes his mentor and eventually despairs. It is by these failures that Candide is painfully cured (as Voltaire would see it) of his optimism.

This critique of Voltaire's seems to be directed almost exclusively at Leibnizian optimism. Candide does not ridicule Voltaire's contemporary Alexander Pope, a later optimist of slightly different convictions. Candide does not discuss Pope's optimistic principle that "all is right", but Leibniz's that states, "this is the best of all possible worlds". However subtle the difference between the two, Candide is unambiguous as to which is its subject. Some critics conjecture that Voltaire meant to spare Pope this ridicule out of respect, although Voltaire's Poème may have been written as a more direct response to Pope's theories. This work is similar to Candide in subject matter, but very different from it in style: the Poème embodies a more serious philosophical argument than Candide.[77]

Conclusion Edit

The conclusion of the novel, in which Candide finally dismisses his tutor's optimism, leaves unresolved what philosophy the protagonist is to accept in its stead. This element of Candide has been written about voluminously, perhaps above all others. The conclusion is enigmatic and its analysis is contentious.[78]

Voltaire develops no formal, systematic philosophy for the characters to adopt.[79] The conclusion of the novel may be thought of not as a philosophical alternative to optimism, but as a prescribed practical outlook (though what it prescribes is in dispute). Many critics have concluded that one minor character or another is portrayed as having the right philosophy. For instance, a number believe that Martin is treated sympathetically, and that his character holds Voltaire's ideal philosophy—pessimism. Others disagree, citing Voltaire's negative descriptions of Martin's principles and the conclusion of the work in which Martin plays little part.[80]

Within debates attempting to decipher the conclusion of Candide lies another primary Candide debate. This one concerns the degree to which Voltaire was advocating a pessimistic philosophy, by which Candide and his companions give up hope for a better world. Critics argue that the group's reclusion on the farm signifies Candide and his companions' loss of hope for the rest of the human race. This view is to be compared to a reading that presents Voltaire as advocating a melioristic philosophy and a precept committing the travellers to improving the world through metaphorical gardening. This debate, and others, focuses on the question of whether or not Voltaire was prescribing passive retreat from society, or active industrious contribution to it.[81]

Inside vs. outside interpretations Edit

Separate from the debate about the text's conclusion is the "inside/outside" controversy. This argument centers on the matter of whether or not Voltaire was actually prescribing anything. Roy Wolper, professor emeritus of English, argues in a revolutionary 1969 paper that Candide does not necessarily speak for its author; that the work should be viewed as a narrative independent of Voltaire's history; and that its message is entirely (or mostly) inside it. This point of view, the "inside", specifically rejects attempts to find Voltaire's "voice" in the many characters of Candide and his other works. Indeed, writers have seen Voltaire as speaking through at least Candide, Martin, and the Turk. Wolper argues that Candide should be read with a minimum of speculation as to its meaning in Voltaire's personal life. His article ushered in a new era of Voltaire studies, causing many scholars to look at the novel differently.[82][83]

Critics such as Lester Crocker, Henry Stavan, and Vivienne Mylne find too many similarities between Candide's point of view and that of Voltaire to accept the "inside" view; they support the "outside" interpretation. They believe that Candide's final decision is the same as Voltaire's, and see a strong connection between the development of the protagonist and his author.[84] Some scholars who support the "outside" view also believe that the isolationist philosophy of the Old Turk closely mirrors that of Voltaire. Others see a strong parallel between Candide's gardening at the conclusion and the gardening of the author.[85] Martine Darmon Meyer argues that the "inside" view fails to see the satirical work in context, and that denying that Candide is primarily a mockery of optimism (a matter of historical context) is a "very basic betrayal of the text".[86][87]

Reception Edit

De roman, Voltaire en a fait un, lequel est le résumé de toutes ses œuvres ... Toute son intelligence était une machine de guerre. Et ce qui me le fait chérir, c'est le dégoût que m'inspirent les voltairiens, des gens qui rient sur les grandes choses! Est-ce qu'il riait, lui? Il grinçait ...

— Flaubert, Correspondance, éd. Conard, II, 348; III, 219[88]

Voltaire made, with this novel, a résumé of all his works ... His whole intelligence was a war machine. And what makes me cherish it is the disgust which has been inspired in me by the Voltairians, people who laugh about the important things! Was he laughing? Voltaire? He was screeching ...

— Flaubert, Correspondance, éd. Conard, II, 348; III, 219[88]

Though Voltaire did not openly admit to having written the controversial Candide until 1768 (until then he signed with a pseudonym: "Monsieur le docteur Ralph", or "Doctor Ralph"[89]), his authorship of the work was hardly disputed.[90][a]

Immediately after publication, the work and its author were denounced by both secular and religious authorities, because the book openly derides government and church alike. It was because of such polemics that Omer-Louis-François Joly de Fleury, who was Advocate General to the Parisian parliament when Candide was published, found parts of Candide to be "contrary to religion and morals".[90]

Despite much official indictment, soon after its publication, Candide's irreverent prose was being quoted. "Let us eat a Jesuit", for instance, became a popular phrase for its reference to a humorous passage in Candide.[92] By the end of February 1759, the Grand Council of Geneva and the administrators of Paris had banned Candide.[4] Candide nevertheless succeeded in selling twenty thousand to thirty thousand copies by the end of the year in over twenty editions, making it a best seller. The Duke de La Vallière speculated near the end of January 1759 that Candide might have been the fastest-selling book ever.[90] In 1762, Candide was listed in the Index Librorum Prohibitorum, the Roman Catholic Church's list of prohibited books.[4]

Bannings of Candide lasted into the twentieth century in the United States, where it has long been considered a seminal work of Western literature. At least once, Candide was temporarily barred from entering America: in February 1929, a US customs official in Boston prevented a number of copies of the book, deemed "obscene",[93] from reaching a Harvard University French class. Candide was admitted in August of the same year; however by that time the class was over.[93] In an interview soon after Candide's detention, the official who confiscated the book explained the office's decision to ban it, "But about 'Candide,' I'll tell you. For years we've been letting that book get by. There were so many different editions, all sizes and kinds, some illustrated and some plain, that we figured the book must be all right. Then one of us happened to read it. It's a filthy book".[94][95][96]

Legacy Edit

Candide is the most widely read of Voltaire's many works,[63] and it is considered one of the great achievements of Western literature.[11] William F. Bottiglia opines, "The physical size of Candide, as well as Voltaire's attitude toward his fiction, precludes the achievement of artistic dimension through plenitude, autonomous '3D' vitality, emotional resonance, or poetic exaltation. Candide, then, cannot in quantity or quality, measure up to the supreme classics" such as the works of Homer or Shakespeare, Sophocles, Chaucer, Dante, Cervantes, Fielding, Goethe, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Racine, or Molière.[97] Bottiglia instead calls it a miniature classic; but others have been more forgiving of its size.[11][97] As the only work of Voltaire which has remained popular up to the present day,[98] Candide is listed in Harold Bloom's The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages. It is included in the Encyclopædia Britannica collection Great Books of the Western World.[99] Candide has influenced modern writers of black humour such as Céline, Joseph Heller, John Barth, Thomas Pynchon, Kurt Vonnegut, and Terry Southern. Its parody and picaresque methods have become favourites of black humorists.[100]

Charles Brockden Brown, an early American novelist, may have been directly affected by Voltaire, whose work he knew well. Mark Kamrath, professor of English, describes the strength of the connection between Candide and Brown's Edgar Huntly; or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker (1799): "An unusually large number of parallels...crop up in the two novels, particularly in terms of characters and plot." For instance, the protagonists of both novels are romantically involved with a recently orphaned young woman. Furthermore, in both works the brothers of the female lovers are Jesuits, and each is murdered (although under different circumstances).[101]

Some twentieth-century novels that may have been influenced by Candide are some dystopian science-fiction works. Armand Mattelart, a French critic, sees Candide in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, and Yevgeny Zamyatin's We, three canonical works of the genre. Specifically, Mattelart writes that in each of these works, there exist references to Candide's popularisation of the phrase "the best of all possible worlds". He cites as evidence, for example, that the French version of Brave New World was entitled Le Meilleur des mondes (lit.'"The best of worlds"').[102]

Readers of Candide often compare it with certain works of the modern genre the Theatre of the Absurd. Haydn Mason, a Voltaire scholar, sees in Candide a few similarities to this brand of literature. For instance, he notes commonalities of Candide and Waiting for Godot (1952). In both of these works, and in a similar manner, friendship provides emotional support for characters when they are confronted with harshness of their existences.[103] However, Mason qualifies, "the conte must not be seen as a forerunner of the 'absurd' in modern fiction. Candide's world has many ridiculous and meaningless elements, but human beings are not totally deprived of the ability to make sense out of it."[104] John Pilling, biographer of Beckett, does state that Candide was an early and powerful influence on Beckett's thinking.[105] Rosa Luxemburg, in the aftermath of the First World War, remarked upon re-reading Candide: "Before the war, I would have thought this wicked compilation of all human misery a caricature. Now it strikes me as altogether realistic."[106]

The American alternative rock band Bloodhound Gang refer to Candide in their song "Take the Long Way Home", from the American edition of their 1999 album Hooray for Boobies.

Derivative works Edit

In 1760, one year after Voltaire published Candide, a sequel was published with the name Candide, ou l'optimisme, seconde partie.[107] This work is attributed both to Thorel de Campigneulles, a writer unknown today, and Henri Joseph Du Laurens, who is suspected of having habitually plagiarised Voltaire.[108] The story continues in this sequel with Candide having new adventures in the Ottoman Empire, Persia, and Denmark. Part II has potential use in studies of the popular and literary receptions of Candide, but is almost certainly apocryphal.[107] In total, by the year 1803, at least ten imitations of Candide or continuations of its story were published by authors other than Voltaire.[90]

Candide was adapted for the radio anthology program On Stage in 1953. Richard Chandlee wrote the script; Elliott Lewis, Cathy Lewis, Edgar Barrier, Byron Kane, Jack Kruschen, Howard McNear, Larry Thor, Martha Wentworth, and Ben Wright performed.[109]

 
Leonard Bernstein in 1955

The operetta Candide was originally conceived by playwright Lillian Hellman, as a play with incidental music. Leonard Bernstein, the American composer and conductor who wrote the music, was so excited about the project that he convinced Hellman to do it as a "comic operetta".[110] Many lyricists worked on the show, including James Agee, Dorothy Parker, John Latouche, Richard Wilbur, Leonard and Felicia Bernstein, and Hellman. Hershy Kay orchestrated all the pieces except for the overture, which Bernstein did himself.[111] Candide first opened on Broadway as a musical on 1 December 1956. The premier production was directed by Tyrone Guthrie and conducted by Samuel Krachmalnick.[111] While this production was a box office flop, the music was highly praised, and an original cast album was made. The album gradually became a cult hit, but Hellman's libretto was criticised as being too serious an adaptation of Voltaire's novel.[112] Candide has been revised and reworked several times. The first New York revival, directed by Hal Prince, featured an entirely new libretto by Hugh Wheeler and additional lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Bernstein revised the work again in 1987 with the collaboration of John Mauceri and John Wells. After Bernstein's death, further revised productions of the musical were performed in versions prepared by Trevor Nunn and John Caird in 1999, and Mary Zimmerman in 2010.

Candido, ovvero un sogno fatto in Sicilia [it] (1977) or simply Candido is a book by Leonardo Sciascia. It was at least partly based on Voltaire's Candide, although the actual influence of Candide on Candido is a hotly debated topic. A number of theories on the matter have been proposed. Proponents of one say that Candido is very similar to Candide, only with a happy ending; supporters of another claim that Voltaire provided Sciascia with only a starting point from which to work, that the two books are quite distinct.[113][114]

The BBC produced a television adaptation in 1973, with Ian Ogilvy as Candide, Emrys James as Dr. Pangloss, and Frank Finlay as Voltaire himself, acting as the narrator.[115]

Nedim Gürsel wrote his 2001 novel Le voyage de Candide à Istanbul about a minor passage in Candide during which its protagonist meets Ahmed III, the deposed Turkish sultan. This chance meeting on a ship from Venice to Istanbul is the setting of Gürsel's book.[116] Terry Southern, in writing his popular novel Candy with Mason Hoffenberg adapted Candide for a modern audience and changed the protagonist from male to female. Candy deals with the rejection of a sort of optimism which the author sees in women's magazines of the modern era; Candy also parodies pornography and popular psychology. This adaptation of Candide was adapted for the cinema by director Christian Marquand in 1968.[117]

In addition to the above, Candide was made into a number of minor films and theatrical adaptations throughout the twentieth century. For a list of these, see Voltaire: Candide ou L'Optimisme et autres contes (1989) with preface and commentaries by Pierre Malandain.[118]

In May 2009, a play titled Optimism, based on Candide, opened at the CUB Malthouse Theatre in Melbourne. It followed the basic story of Candide, incorporating anachronisms, music, and stand up comedy from comedian Frank Woodley. It toured Australia and played at the Edinburgh International Festival.[119] In 2010, the Icelandic writer Óttar M. Norðfjörð published a rewriting and modernisation of Candide, titled Örvitinn; eða hugsjónamaðurinn.

See also Edit

Explanatory notes Edit

  1. ^ Will Durant in The Age of Voltaire:

    It was published early in 1759 as Candide, ou l'optimisme, purportedly "translated from the German of Dr. Ralph, with additions found in the pocket of the Doctor when he died at Minden." The Great Council of Geneva almost at once (March 5) ordered it to be burned. Of course Voltaire denied his authorship: "people must have lost their senses," he wrote to a friendly pastor in Geneva, "to attribute to me that pack of nonsense. I have, thank God, better occupations." But France was unanimous: no other man could have written Candide. Here was that deceptively simple, smoothly flowing, lightly prancing, impishly ironic prose that only he could write; here and there a little obscenity, a little scatology; everywhere a playful, darting, lethal irreverence; if the style is the man, this had to be Voltaire.[91]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Wootton (2000), p. 1
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Aldridge (1975), pp. 251–254
  3. ^ a b Davidson (2005), pp. 52–53
  4. ^ a b c d e f Williams (1997), pp. 1–3
  5. ^ "Candide". Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English. Longman. Retrieved 17 August 2019.
  6. ^ Candide, ou L'optimisme , traduit de l'allemand de M. le docteur Ralph (1 ed.). 1759. Retrieved 27 May 2015. via Gallica
  7. ^ Critical Survey of Short Fiction (2001)
  8. ^ "Pangloss".
  9. ^ Mason (1992), p. 10
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Davidson (2005), p. 54
  11. ^ a b c Aldridge (1975), p. 260
  12. ^ Waldinger (1987), p. ix
  13. ^ Wade (1959b), p. 88
  14. ^ a b Radner & Radner (1998), pp. 669–686
  15. ^ Mason (1992), p. 4
  16. ^ Wade (1959b), p. 93
  17. ^ Wade (1959b), pp. 88, 93
  18. ^ Grimmelshausen 1669.
  19. ^ Havens (1973), pp. 844–845
  20. ^ Wade (1959b), p. 296
  21. ^ Broome (1960), p. 510
  22. ^ Means (2006), pp. 1–3
  23. ^ Gopnik (2005)
  24. ^ McGhee (1943), pp. 438, 440
  25. ^ Aldridge (1975), p. 155
  26. ^ Mason (1970), pp. 19–35
  27. ^ Wade (1959a), p. 65
  28. ^ Torrey (1929), p. 446
  29. ^ a b c Wade (1956), pp. 3–4
  30. ^ Havens (1932), p. 225
  31. ^ Wade (1959b), pp. 145, 156
  32. ^ Rouillard (1962)
  33. ^ Wade (1957), p. 94
  34. ^ Torrey (1929), pp. 445–447
  35. ^ Wade (1959b), p. 182
  36. ^ a b Wade (1959a), pp. 63–88
  37. ^ Wade (1957), p. 96
  38. ^ Voltaire [1759] (1959)
  39. ^ Taylor (1979), p. 207
  40. ^ Williams (1997), p. 97
  41. ^ Bellhouse (2006), p. 780
  42. ^ Bellhouse (2006), p. 756
  43. ^ Bellhouse (2006), p. 757
  44. ^ Bellhouse (2006), p. 769
  45. ^ Waldinger (1987), p. 23
  46. ^ Williams (1997), pp. 26–27
  47. ^ Beck (1999), p. 203
  48. ^ Leister (1985), pp. 32–33
  49. ^ The 1569 story of Dirk Willems illustrated by Mennonite Jan Luyken in Martyrs Mirror (1685).
  50. ^ a b Smollett (2008), Ch. 4. ("matelot furieux")
  51. ^ Ch. 7. ("la vieille")
  52. ^ a b c Ayer (1986), pp. 143–145
  53. ^ "Voltaire – Candide XVIII".
  54. ^ Aldridge (1975), p. 254
  55. ^ Wootton (2000), p. xvii
  56. ^ This is the most famous quote from the novel. See Alex Massie, Pour encourager les autres? Oui, monsieur... 2014-01-08 at the Wayback Machine, The Spectator (31 July 2007).
  57. ^ Voltaire [1759] (1959), pp. 107–108
  58. ^ a b Voltaire [1759] (1959), p. 112,113
  59. ^ a b c Barasch (1985), p. 3
  60. ^ a b Starobinski (1976), p. 194
  61. ^ Wade (1959b), p. 133
  62. ^ Aldridge (1975), p. 255
  63. ^ a b Ayer (1986), p. 139
  64. ^ Havens (1973), p. 843
  65. ^ a b Bottiglia (1968), pp. 89–92
  66. ^ Vannini (2011), pp. 106–107
  67. ^ Wade (1959b), pp. 303–305
  68. ^ Waldinger (1987), p. 20
  69. ^ Readings on Candide (2001), p. 92
  70. ^ a b Bottiglia (1951), pp. 727, 731
  71. ^ Davidson (2005), p. 55
  72. ^ Scherr (1993)
  73. ^ Aldridge (1975), p. 258
  74. ^ Readings on Candide (2001), p. 121
  75. ^ Bottiglia (1951), p. 720
  76. ^ Smollett (2008), Ch. 1
  77. ^ Aldridge (1975), pp. 251–254, 361
  78. ^ Leister (1985), p. 29
  79. ^ Bottiglia (1951), pp. 723–724
  80. ^ Bottiglia (1951), p. 726
  81. ^ Leister (1985), p. 26
  82. ^ Braun, Sturzer, Meyer (1988)
  83. ^ Wolper (1969), pp. 265–277
  84. ^ Bottiglia (1951), pp. 719–720
  85. ^ Braun, Sturzer & Meyer (1988), pp. 569–571
  86. ^ Braun, Sturzer & Meyer (1988), p. 574
  87. ^ Crocker (1971)
  88. ^ a b Voltaire [1759] (1931), p. vii
  89. ^ Wade (1959b), p. xiii
  90. ^ a b c d Mason (1992), pp. 13–15
  91. ^ Will Durant (1965). The Story of Civilization Volume 9:The Age of Voltaire. Simon&Schuster. p. 724.
  92. ^ Mason (1992), ch. 3
  93. ^ a b Haight (1970), p. 33
  94. ^ Hobbs (1930), p. 190
  95. ^ Bowerman (1931), p. 20
  96. ^ Boyer (2002), p. 209
  97. ^ a b Bottiglia (1959), pp. 247–248
  98. ^ Mason (1992), ch. 2
  99. ^ Britannica (2008)
  100. ^ Readings on Candide (2001), pp. 112–113
  101. ^ Kamrath (1991), pp. 5–14
  102. ^ Monty (2006), p. 5
  103. ^ Mason (1992), pp. 33, 37
  104. ^ Mason (1992), p. 98
  105. ^ Monty (2006), p. 151
  106. ^ Young, James D. (1988). Socialism Since 1889: A Biographical History. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 91.
  107. ^ a b Astbury (2005), p. 503
  108. ^ Clark (1993), pp. VIII, IX
  109. ^ Grams, Martin (2008-02-27). Radio drama : a comprehensive chronicle of American network programs, 1932-1962. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. ISBN 978-0786438716. OCLC 188535974.
  110. ^ Peyser (1987), p. 247
  111. ^ a b Peyser (1987), p. 248
  112. ^ Peyser (1987), pp. 249–251
  113. ^ Morrison (2002), p. 59
  114. ^ Burns (2000), p. 992
  115. ^ "Candide". Collections Search. British Film Institute. n.d. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
  116. ^ Hitchins (2002), p. 160
  117. ^ Silva (2000), pp. 784–785
  118. ^ Malandain (1989)
  119. ^ Boztas (2009)

General and cited sources Edit

  • Aldridge, Alfred Owen (1975). Voltaire and the Century of Light. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-06287-0.
  • Astbury, Kate (April 2005). "Candide, ou l'optimisme, seconde partie (1760) / Jean-François Marmontel: un intellectuel exemplaire au siècle des Lumières". Modern Language Review. Modern Humanities Research Association. 100 (2). EBSCO Accession Number 16763209.
  • Ayer, A.J. (1986). Voltaire. New York City: Random House. ISBN 0-394-54798-5.
  • Barasch, Frances K. (Winter 1985). "The Grotesque as a Comic Genre". Modern Language Studies. 15 (1): 3–11. doi:10.2307/3194413. JSTOR 3194413.
  • Beck, Ervin (Summer 1999). "Voltaire's Candide". Explicator. 57 (4): 203–204. doi:10.1080/00144949909596872. EBSCO Accession Number 2336667.
  • Bellhouse, Mary L. (December 2006). "Candide Shoots the Monkey Lovers: Representing Black Men in Eighteenth-Century French Visual Culture". Political Theory. Sage Publications. 34 (6): 756. doi:10.1177/0090591706293020. S2CID 144392810.
  • Bottiglia, William F. (September 1951). "Candide's Garden". PMLA. 66 (5): 718–733 [720]. doi:10.2307/459532. JSTOR 459532. S2CID 163821740.
  • Bottiglia, William F. (1959). Besterman, Theodore (ed.). Voltaire's Candide: Analysis of a Classic. Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century. Vol. VII. Institut et Musee Voltaire. OCLC 185848340.
  • Bottiglia, William F. (1968). Voltaire; a collection of critical essays. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice–Hall, Inc. OCLC 440167.
  • Bowerman, George F. (1931). Censorship and the Public Library. Ayer Publishing. ISBN 0-8369-0232-7.
  • Boyer, Paul S. (2002). Purity in Print: Book Censorship in America from the Gilded Age to the Computer Age. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-17584-7.
  • Boztas, Senay (2009). "Interview: Frank Woodley – Candide laughter". Scotland on Sunday. Archived from the original on 2013-01-04. Retrieved 2009-11-14.
  • Braun, Theodore E. D. (March 1988). "Teaching Candide – A Debate". The French Review. 61 (4): 569–571. JSTOR 393842.
  • Britannica (2008). (PDF). Britannica. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-08-13. Retrieved 2008-06-22.
  • Broome, J. H. (1960). "Voltaire and Fougeret de Monbron a 'Candide' Problem Reconsidered". The Modern Language Review. 55 (4): 509–518. doi:10.2307/3721375. JSTOR 3721375.
  • Burns, Jennefer (October 2000). "Telling tales about 'Impegno': Commitment and hindsight in Vittorini and Calvino". The Modern Language Review. 95 (4): 992–1006. doi:10.2307/3736629. JSTOR 3736629. Gale Document Number:A80191130.
  • Crocker, Lester G. (Autumn 1971). "Professor Wolper's Interpretation of Candide". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 5 (1): 145–156.
  • Davidson, Ian (2005). Voltaire in Exile. New York: Grove Press. p. 53. ISBN 0-8021-1791-0.
  • Dawson, Deidre (January 1, 1986). "In Search of the Real Pangloss: The Correspondence of Voltaire with the Duchess of Saxe-Gotha". Yale French Studies (71 Men/Women of Letters): 93–112. doi:10.2307/2930024. ISSN 0044-0078. JSTOR 2930024.
  • Gopnik, Adam (2005). "Voltaire's Garden". New Yorker. Conde Nast Publications. 81 (3).
  • Haight, Anne Lyon (1970). Banned Books: Informal Notes on Some Books Banned for Various Reasons at Various Times and in Various Places. ISBN 0-8352-0204-6. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Havens, George R. (April 1932). "The Composition of Voltaire's Candide". Modern Language Notes. 47 (4): 225–234. doi:10.2307/2913581. JSTOR 2913581.
  • Havens, George R. (May 1973). "Some Notes on Candide". Modern Language Notes. 88 (4, French Issue): 841–847. doi:10.2307/2907412. JSTOR 2907412.
  • Hitchins, Keith (Summer–Autumn 2002). "Le voyage de Candide à Istanbul". World Literature Today. 76 (3/4). doi:10.2307/40157767. JSTOR 40157767. EBSCO Accession Number 9209009.
  • Hobbs, Perry (2 April 1930). "Dirty Hands: A Federal Customs Official Looks at Art". The New Republic.
  • Kamrath, Mark L. (1991). "Brown and the Enlightenment: A study of the influence of Voltaire's Candide in Edgar Huntly". The American Transcendental Quarterly. 5 (1).
  • Leister, Elizabeth Cooney (1985). Voltaire's Candide. Barron's book notes. Woodbury, NY: Barron's Educational Series, Inc. ISBN 0-8120-3505-4.
  • Malandain, Pierre (1989). Voltaire: Candide ou L'Optimisme et autres contes. Pocket. ISBN 2-266-08266-3.
  • Mason, H. T. (January 1970). "Voltaire's "Contes": An "État Présent"". The Modern Language Review. 65 (1): 19–35. doi:10.2307/3722784. JSTOR 3722784.
  • Mason, Haydn (1992). Candide: Optimism Demolished. Twayne's Masterwork Studies. New York City: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 0-8057-8085-8.
  • McGhee, Dorothy M. (1943). "The "Conte Philosophique" Bridging a Century". PMLA. Modern Language Association. 58 (2): 438–449. doi:10.2307/459053. JSTOR 459053. S2CID 163776697.
  • Means, Richard (2006). Voltaire: Background and Early Writing. Great Neck Publishing. ISBN 1429806540. EBSCOhost Accession Number: 19358655.
  • Monty, Julie Anne. (PDF). The University of Texas at Austin. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-12-18. Retrieved 2008-07-05.
  • Morrison, Ian R. (January 2002). "Leonardo Sciascia's Candido and Voltaire's Candide". Modern Language Review. 97 (1): 59–71. doi:10.2307/3735619. JSTOR 3735619. S2CID 162092688. EBSCO Accession Number 6388910.
  • Oxford Color French Dictionary Plus. New York: Oxford University Press Inc. 2004. p. 42. ISBN 0-19-860898-5.
  • Peyser, Joan (1987). Bernstein, a biography. New York: Beech Tree Books. ISBN 0-688-04918-4.
  • Radner, Daisie (October 1998). "Optimality in biology: Pangloss or Leibniz?". Monist. 81 (4): 669–686. doi:10.5840/monist199881433. JSTOR 27903615. EBSCO Accession Number 1713757.
  • Rouillard, C. D. (November 1962). "Review of 'Voltaire and Candide: A Study in the Fusion of History, Art and Philosophy'". Modern Philology. 60 (2): 145–149. doi:10.1086/389529. JSTOR 434858.
  • Scherr, Arthur (Spring 1993). "Voltaire's 'Candide': a tale of women's equality". The Midwest Quarterly. 34 (3): 261–282. Thomson Gale Document Number A13877067.
  • Silva, Edward T. (1974). "From Candide to Candy: Love's Labor Lost". Journal of Popular Culture. 8 (4): 783–791. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.1975.00783.x. ISSN 0022-3840. EBSCO Accession Number 1975201832.
  • Smollett, Tobias (2008). "Candide". Wikisource, The Free Library. Retrieved 2008-05-29.
  • Starobinski, Jean (Summer 1976). "Sur le Style Philosophique de Candide". Comparative Literature. 28 (3): 193–200. doi:10.2307/1769217. JSTOR 1769217.
  • Taylor, O. R.; Vercruysse, Jeroom (1979). "Review: Les Éditions encadrées des Œuvres de Voltaire de 1775". The Modern Language Review. 74 (1): 207. doi:10.2307/3726968. JSTOR 3726968.
  • Torrey, Norman L. (November 1929). "The Date of Composition of Candide, and Voltaire's Corrections". Modern Language Notes. 44 (7): 445–447 [446]. doi:10.2307/2913558. JSTOR 2913558.
  • Vannini, Giulio (2011). "Il Satyricon di Petronio nel Candide di Voltaire". Antike und Abendland. 57: 94–108. doi:10.1515/9783110239171.94. ISSN 1613-0421. S2CID 170870726.
  • Voltaire (1931) [1759]. Morize, André (ed.). Candide: ou, L'optimisme; édition critique avec une introd. et un commentaire par André Morize. Paris.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Voltaire (1959) [1759]. Bair, Lowell (ed.). Candide. translated by Lowell Bair ; with an appreciation by Andre Maurois ; illustrations by Sheilah Beckett. New York: Bantam Dell. ISBN 0-553-21166-8.
  • Wade, Ira O. (October 1956). "The La Vallière MS of Candide". The French Review. 30 (1).
  • Wade, Ira O. (15 February 1957). "A Manuscript of Voltaire's Candide". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 101 (1): 93–105. JSTOR 985142.
  • Wade, Ira O. (1959a). "The First Edition of Candide: A Problem of Identification". The Princeton University Library Chronicle. 20 (2): 63–88. doi:10.2307/26403294. JSTOR 26403294. OCLC 810544747.
  • Wade, Ira O. (1959b). Voltaire and Candide: A Study in the Fusion of History, Art, and Philosophy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-8046-1688-4. Library of Congress number 59-11085.
  • Waldinger, Renée (1987). Approaches to Teaching Voltaire's Candide. New York: The Modern Language Association of America. ISBN 0-87352-503-5.
  • Walsh, Thomas (2001). Readings on Candide. Literary Companion to World Literature. San Diego, CA: Greenhaven Press. ISBN 0-7377-0362-8.
  • Williams, David (1997). Voltaire, Candide. Spain: Grand & Cutler Ltd. ISBN 0-7293-0395-0.
  • Wolper, Roy S. (Winter 1969). "Candide, Gull in the Garden?". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 3 (2): 265–277. doi:10.2307/2737575. JSTOR 2737575.
  • Wootton, David (2000). Candide and Related Texts. Hackett Publishing Company, Inc. ISBN 0-87220-547-9.
  • Grimmelshausen, H. J. Chr. (1669). Der abentheurliche Simplicissimus [The adventurous Simplicissimus] (in German). Nuremberg: J. Fillion. OCLC 22567416.

Further reading Edit

  • Adorno, Theodor W. (1970). Redmond, Dennis (ed.). Negative Dialectics. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp Verlag. ISBN 0-7456-3510-5. Retrieved 2007-07-28.
  • Betts, C. J. (April 1985). "On the Beginning and Ending of Candide". The Modern Language Review. 80 (2): 283–292. doi:10.2307/3728661. JSTOR 3728661.
  • Cates, David Allan. (PDF). XOutofWonderland.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-02-16. Retrieved 2008-01-06.
  • Gullace, Giovanni (1985). Il Candide nel pensiero di Voltaire. Napoli: Società editrice napoletana.
  • Gullette, Cameron C. (December 1934). "Fanfluche – Cousin of Candide". The French Review. 8 (2): 93–107.
  • Henry, Patrick (Spring 1977). "Travel in Candide: Moving On But Going Nowhere". Papers on Language & Literature. 13 (2): 193–197. ISSN 0031-1294. EBSCO Accession Number 7728974.
  • Henry, Patrick (Winter 1977). "Time in Candide". Studies in Short Fiction. 14 (1): 86–88. ISSN 0039-3789. EBSCO Accession Number 7150968.
  • Henry, Patrick (Spring 1977). "Working in Candide's Garden". Studies in Short Fiction. 14 (2): 183–184. ISSN 0039-3789. EBSCO Accession Number 7153217.
  • Henry, Patrick (1987). . Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century. 249. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
  • Howells, R. J. (April 1985). "'Cette Boucherie Héroïque': Candide as Carnival". The Modern Language Review. 80 (2): 293–303. doi:10.2307/3728662. JSTOR 3728662.
  • Kirby, David (Summer 1993). "The new Candide or what I learned in the theory wars". Virginia Quarterly Review. 69 (3): 393–407. ISSN 0042-675X. EBSCO Accession Number 9308316577.
  • Lynch, James J. (January 1985). "Romance Conventions in Voltaire's Candide". South Atlantic Review. 50 (1): 35–46. doi:10.2307/3199529. JSTOR 3199529.
  • Marsh, Leonard (Spring 2004). "Voltaire's Candide". Explicator. 62 (3): 144–146. doi:10.1080/00144940409597202. ISSN 0014-4940. S2CID 162339127. EBSCO Accession Number 13275608.
  • Oake, Roger B.; Wade, Ira O. (Spring 1961). "Review of "Voltaire and Candide"". Comparative Literature. 13 (2): 176–178. doi:10.2307/1768579. JSTOR 1768579.
  • Scherr, Arthur (Winter 2001). "Voltaire's Candide". Explicator. 59 (2): 74–76. doi:10.1080/00144940109597087. S2CID 162381012. EBSCO Accession Number 4423176.
  • Sturm, Mary J.; Parsell, David B. (2001). Critical Survey of Short Fiction (Second Revised ed.). Salem Press, Inc. ISBN 0-89356-006-5. EBSCO Accession Number MOL0120000549.

External links Edit

Sister project links Edit

  • Voltaire (1759). Candide . Translated by Tobias Smollett – via Wikisource.
  • Voltaire. Candide  (in French) – via Wikisource.

Editions Edit

  • Candide at Standard Ebooks
  • Candide at Project Gutenberg (plain text and HTML)
  • Candide at Internet Archive (scanned books original editions color illustrated)
  •   Candide public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • Candide (original version) with 2200+ English annotations at Tailored Texts
  • Candide, ou l'optimisme, traduit de l'allemand. De Mr. le Docteur Ralph, 1759.
    • Candide, ou l'optimisme, Par Mr. de Voltaire. Edition revue, corrigée & augmentée par L'Auteur, vol. 1, vol. 2, aux delices, 1761–1763.
  • La Vallière Manuscript at http://gallica.bnf.fr.

Miscellaneous Edit

  • , bibliography of illustrated editions, list of available electronic editions and more useful information from Trier University Library
  • , a public wiki dedicated to Candide
  • Brief Bibliography for the Study of Candide, issued by the Voltaire Society of America
  • , from Dr Martin Evans at Stanford University, via iTunes

candide, this, article, about, voltaire, satire, other, uses, disambiguation, optimisme, deed, french, french, satire, written, voltaire, philosopher, enlightenment, first, published, 1759, novella, been, widely, translated, with, english, versions, titled, be. This article is about Voltaire s satire For other uses see Candide disambiguation Candide ou l Optimisme k ɒ n ˈ d iː d kon DEED 5 French kɑ did is a French satire written by Voltaire a philosopher of the Age of Enlightenment 6 first published in 1759 The novella has been widely translated with English versions titled Candide or All for the Best 1759 Candide or The Optimist 1762 and Candide Optimism 1947 7 It begins with a young man Candide who is living a sheltered life in an Edenic paradise and being indoctrinated with Leibnizian optimism by his mentor Professor Pangloss 8 The work describes the abrupt cessation of this lifestyle followed by Candide s slow and painful disillusionment as he witnesses and experiences great hardships in the world Voltaire concludes Candide with if not rejecting Leibnizian optimism outright advocating a deeply practical precept we must cultivate our garden in lieu of the Leibnizian mantra of Pangloss all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds CandideThe title page of the 1759 edition published by Cramer in Geneva which reads Candide or Optimism translated from the German of Dr Ralph 1 2 AuthorVoltaireOriginal titleCandide ou l OptimismeCountryFranceLanguageFrenchGenreConte philosophiqueSatirePicaresque novelBildungsromanTragedyPublisher1759 Cramer Marc Michel Rey Jean Nourse Lambert and othersPublication dateJanuary 1759 3 4 Candide is characterized by its tone as well as by its erratic fantastical and fast moving plot A picaresque novel with a story similar to that of a more serious coming of age narrative bildungsroman it parodies many adventure and romance cliches the struggles of which are caricatured in a tone that is bitter and matter of fact Still the events discussed are often based on historical happenings such as the Seven Years War and the 1755 Lisbon earthquake 9 As philosophers of Voltaire s day contended with the problem of evil so does Candide in this short theological novel albeit more directly and humorously Voltaire ridicules religion theologians governments armies philosophies and philosophers Through Candide he assaults Leibniz and his optimism 10 11 Candide has enjoyed both great success and great scandal Immediately after its secretive publication the book was widely banned because it contained religious blasphemy political sedition and intellectual hostility hidden under a thin veil of naivety 10 However with its sharp wit and insightful portrayal of the human condition the novel has since inspired many later authors and artists to mimic and adapt it Today Candide is considered Voltaire s magnum opus 10 and is often listed as part of the Western canon It is among the most frequently taught works of French literature 12 The British poet and literary critic Martin Seymour Smith listed Candide as one of the 100 most influential books ever written Contents 1 Historical and literary background 2 Creation 3 List of characters 3 1 Main characters 3 2 Secondary characters 4 Synopsis 4 1 Chapters I X 4 2 Chapters XI XX 4 3 Chapters XXI XXX 5 Style 5 1 Satire 5 2 Garden motif 6 Philosophy 6 1 Optimism 6 2 Conclusion 6 3 Inside vs outside interpretations 7 Reception 8 Legacy 8 1 Derivative works 9 See also 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 General and cited sources 12 Further reading 13 External links 13 1 Sister project links 13 2 Editions 13 3 MiscellaneousHistorical and literary background EditA number of historical events inspired Voltaire to write Candide most notably the publication of Leibniz s Monadology a short metaphysical treatise the Seven Years War and the 1755 Lisbon earthquake Both of the latter catastrophes are frequently referred to in Candide and are cited by scholars as reasons for its composition 13 The 1755 Lisbon earthquake tsunami and resulting fires of All Saints Day had a strong influence on theologians of the day and on Voltaire who was himself disillusioned by them The earthquake had an especially large effect on the contemporary doctrine of optimism a philosophical system founded on the theodicy of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz which insisted on God s benevolence in spite of such events This concept is often put in the form all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds French Tout est pour le mieux dans le meilleur des mondes possibles Philosophers had trouble fitting the horrors of this earthquake into their optimistic world view 14 nbsp This 1755 copper engraving shows the ruins of Lisbon in flames and a tsunami overwhelming the ships in the harbour Voltaire actively rejected Leibnizian optimism after the natural disaster convinced that if this were the best possible world it should surely be better than it is 15 In both Candide and Poeme sur le desastre de Lisbonne Poem on the Lisbon Disaster Voltaire attacks this optimist belief 14 He makes use of the Lisbon earthquake in both Candide and his Poeme to argue this point sarcastically describing the catastrophe as one of the most horrible disasters in the best of all possible worlds 16 Immediately after the earthquake unreliable rumours circulated around Europe sometimes overestimating the severity of the event Ira Wade a noted expert on Voltaire and Candide has analyzed which sources Voltaire might have referenced in learning of the event Wade speculates that Voltaire s primary source for information on the Lisbon earthquake was the 1755 work Relation historique du Tremblement de Terre survenu a Lisbonne by Ange Goudar 17 Apart from such events contemporaneous stereotypes of the German personality may have been a source of inspiration for the text as they were for Simplicius Simplicissimus 18 a 1669 satirical picaresque novel written by Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen and inspired by the Thirty Years War The protagonist of this novel who was supposed to embody stereotypically German characteristics is quite similar to the protagonist of Candide 2 These stereotypes according to Voltaire biographer Alfred Owen Aldridge include extreme credulousness or sentimental simplicity two of Candide s and Simplicius s defining qualities Aldridge writes Since Voltaire admitted familiarity with fifteenth century German authors who used a bold and buffoonish style it is quite possible that he knew Simplicissimus as well 2 A satirical and parodic precursor of Candide Jonathan Swift s Gulliver s Travels 1726 is one of Candide s closest literary relatives This satire tells the story of a gullible ingenue Gulliver who like Candide travels to several remote nations and is hardened by the many misfortunes which befall him As evidenced by similarities between the two books Voltaire probably drew upon Gulliver s Travels for inspiration while writing Candide 19 Other probable sources of inspiration for Candide are Telemaque 1699 by Francois Fenelon and Cosmopolite 1753 by Louis Charles Fougeret de Monbron Candide s parody of the bildungsroman is probably based on Telemaque which includes the prototypical parody of the tutor on whom Pangloss may have been partly based Likewise Monbron s protagonist undergoes a disillusioning series of travels similar to those of Candide 2 20 21 Creation EditBorn Francois Marie Arouet Voltaire 1694 1778 by the time of the Lisbon earthquake was already a well established author known for his satirical wit He had been made a member of the Academie Francaise in 1746 He was a deist a strong proponent of religious freedom and a critic of tyrannical governments Candide became part of his large diverse body of philosophical political and artistic works expressing these views 22 23 More specifically it was a model for the eighteenth and early nineteenth century novels called the contes philosophiques This genre of which Voltaire was one of the founders included previous works of his such as Zadig and Micromegas 24 25 26 nbsp Engraving of Voltaire published as the frontispiece to an 1843 edition of his Dictionnaire philosophiqueIt is unknown exactly when Voltaire wrote Candide 27 but scholars estimate that it was primarily composed in late 1758 and begun as early as 1757 28 Voltaire is believed to have written a portion of it while living at Les Delices near Geneva and also while visiting Charles Theodore the Elector Palatinate at Schwetzingen for three weeks in the summer of 1758 Despite solid evidence for these claims a popular legend persists that Voltaire wrote Candide in three days This idea is probably based on a misreading of the 1885 work La Vie intime de Voltaire aux Delices et a Ferney by Lucien Perey real name Clara Adele Luce Herpin and Gaston Maugras 29 30 The evidence indicates strongly that Voltaire did not rush or improvise Candide but worked on it over a significant period of time possibly even a whole year Candide is mature and carefully developed not impromptu as the intentionally choppy plot and the aforementioned myth might suggest 31 There is only one extant manuscript of Candide that was written before the work s 1759 publication it was discovered in 1956 by Wade and since named the La Valliere Manuscript It is believed to have been sent chapter by chapter by Voltaire to the Duke and Duchess La Valliere in the autumn of 1758 4 The manuscript was sold to the Bibliotheque de l Arsenal in the late eighteenth century where it remained undiscovered for almost two hundred years 32 The La Valliere Manuscript the most original and authentic of all surviving copies of Candide was probably dictated by Voltaire to his secretary Jean Louis Wagniere then edited directly 29 33 In addition to this manuscript there is believed to have been another one copied by Wagniere for the Elector Charles Theodore who hosted Voltaire during the summer of 1758 The existence of this copy was first postulated by Norman L Torrey in 1929 If it exists it remains undiscovered 29 34 Voltaire published Candide simultaneously in five countries no later than 15 January 1759 although the exact date is uncertain 4 35 Seventeen versions of Candide from 1759 in the original French are known today and there has been great controversy over which is the earliest 4 More versions were published in other languages Candide was translated once into Italian and thrice into English that same year 3 The complicated science of calculating the relative publication dates of all of the versions of Candide is described at length in Wade s article The First Edition of Candide A Problem of Identification The publication process was extremely secretive probably the most clandestine work of the century because of the book s obviously illicit and irreverent content 36 The greatest number of copies of Candide were published concurrently in Geneva by Cramer in Amsterdam by Marc Michel Rey in London by Jean Nourse and in Paris by Lambert 36 nbsp 1803 illustration of the two monkeys chasing their lovers Candide shoots the monkeys thinking they are attacking the women Candide underwent one major revision after its initial publication in addition to some minor ones In 1761 a version of Candide was published that included along with several minor changes a major addition by Voltaire to the twenty second chapter a section that had been thought weak by the Duke of Valliere 37 The English title of this edition was Candide or Optimism Translated from the German of Dr Ralph With the additions found in the Doctor s pocket when he died at Minden in the Year of Grace 1759 38 The last edition of Candide authorised by Voltaire was the one included in Cramer s 1775 edition of his complete works known as l edition encadree in reference to the border or frame around each page 39 40 Voltaire strongly opposed the inclusion of illustrations in his works as he stated in a 1778 letter to the writer and publisher Charles Joseph Panckoucke Je crois que des Estampes seraient fort inutiles Ces colifichets n ont jamais ete admis dans les editions de Ciceron de Virgile et d Horace I believe that these illustrations would be quite useless These baubles have never been allowed in the works of Cicero Virgil and Horace 41 Despite this protest two sets of illustrations for Candide were produced by the French artist Jean Michel Moreau le Jeune The first version was done at Moreau s own expense in 1787 and included in Kehl s publication of that year Oeuvres Completes de Voltaire 42 Four images were drawn by Moreau for this edition and were engraved by Pierre Charles Baquoy 43 The second version in 1803 consisted of seven drawings by Moreau which were transposed by multiple engravers 44 The twentieth century modern artist Paul Klee stated that it was while reading Candide that he discovered his own artistic style Klee illustrated the work and his drawings were published in a 1920 version edited by Kurt Wolff 45 List of characters EditMain characters Edit Candide The title character The illegitimate son of the sister of the Baron of Thunder ten Tronckh In love with Cunegonde Cunegonde The daughter of the Baron of Thunder ten Tronckh In love with Candide Professor Pangloss The royal educator of the court of the baron Described as the greatest philosopher of the Holy Roman Empire The Old Woman Cunegonde s maid while she is the mistress of Don Issachar and the Grand Inquisitor of Portugal Flees with Candide and Cunegonde to the New World Illegitimate daughter of Pope Urban X Cacambo From a Spanish father and a Peruvian mother Lived half his life in Spain and half in Latin America Candide s valet while in America Martin Dutch amateur philosopher and Manichaean Meets Candide in Suriname travels with him afterwards The Baron of Thunder ten Tronckh Brother of Cunegonde Is seemingly killed by the Bulgarians but becomes a Jesuit in Paraguay Disapproves of Candide and Cunegonde s marriage Secondary characters Edit The baron and baroness of Thunder ten Tronckh Father and mother of Cunegonde and the second baron Both slain by the Bulgarians The king of the Bulgarians Jacques the Anabaptist Saves Candide from a lynching in the Netherlands Drowns in the port of Lisbon after saving another sailor s life Don Issachar Jewish landlord in Portugal Cunegonde becomes his mistress shared with the Grand Inquisitor of Portugal Killed by Candide The Grand Inquisitor of Portugal Sentences Candide and Pangloss at the auto da fe Cunegonde is his mistress jointly with Don Issachar Killed by Candide Don Fernando d Ibarra y Figueroa y Mascarenes y Lampourdos y Souza Spanish governor of Buenos Aires Wants Cunegonde as a mistress The king of El Dorado who helps Candide and Cacambo out of El Dorado lets them pick gold from the grounds and makes them rich Mynheer Vanderdendur Dutch ship captain Offers to take Candide from America to France for 30 000 gold coins but then departs without him stealing most of his riches The abbot of Perigord Befriends Candide and Martin leads the police to arrest them he and the police officer accept three diamonds each and release them The marchioness of Parolignac Parisian wench who takes an elaborate title The scholar One of the guests of the marchioness Argues with Candide about art Paquette A chambermaid from Thunder ten Tronckh who gave Pangloss syphilis After the slaying by the Bulgarians works as a prostitute and becomes the property of Friar Giroflee Friar Giroflee Theatine friar In love with the prostitute Paquette Signor Pococurante A Venetian noble Candide and Martin visit his estate where he discusses his disdain of most of the canon of great art In an inn in Venice Candide and Martin dine with six men who turn out to be deposed monarchs Ahmed III Ivan VI of Russia Charles Edward Stuart Augustus III of Poland Stanislaw Leszczynski Theodore of CorsicaSynopsis EditCandide contains thirty episodic chapters which may be grouped into two main schemes one consists of two divisions separated by the protagonist s hiatus in El Dorado the other consists of three parts each defined by its geographical setting By the former scheme the first half of Candide constitutes the rising action and the last part the resolution This view is supported by the strong theme of travel and quest reminiscent of adventure and picaresque novels which tend to employ such a dramatic structure 46 By the latter scheme the thirty chapters may be grouped into three parts each comprising ten chapters and defined by locale I X are set in Europe XI XX are set in the Americas and XXI XXX are set in Europe and the Ottoman Empire 47 48 The plot summary that follows uses this second format and includes Voltaire s additions of 1761 Chapters I X Edit The tale of Candide begins in the castle of the Baron Thunder ten Tronckh in Westphalia home to the Baron s daughter Lady Cunegonde his bastard nephew Candide a tutor Pangloss a chambermaid Paquette and the rest of the Baron s family The protagonist Candide is romantically attracted to Cunegonde He is a young man of the most unaffected simplicity l esprit le plus simple whose face is the true index of his mind sa physionomie annoncait son ame 2 Dr Pangloss professor of metaphysico theologo cosmolonigologie English metaphysico theologo cosmolonigology and self proclaimed optimist teaches his pupils that they live in the best of all possible worlds and that all is for the best nbsp Frontispiece and first page of chapter one of an early English translation by T Smollett et al of Voltaire s Candide London printed for J Newbery et al 1762 All is well in the castle until Cunegonde sees Pangloss sexually engaged with Paquette in some bushes Encouraged by this show of affection Cunegonde drops her handkerchief next to Candide enticing him to kiss her For this infraction Candide is evicted from the castle at which point he is captured by Bulgar Prussian recruiters and coerced into military service where he is flogged nearly executed and forced to participate in a major battle between the Bulgars and the Avars an allegory representing the Prussians and the French Candide eventually escapes the army and makes his way to Holland where he is given aid by Jacques an Anabaptist who strengthens Candide s optimism Soon after Candide finds his master Pangloss now a beggar with syphilis Pangloss reveals he was infected with this disease by Paquette and shocks Candide by relating how Castle Thunder ten Tronckh was destroyed by Bulgars that Cunegonde and her whole family were killed and that Cunegonde was raped before her death Pangloss is cured of his illness by Jacques losing one eye and one ear in the process and the three set sail to Lisbon In Lisbon s harbor they are overtaken by a vicious storm which destroys the boat Jacques attempts to save a sailor and in the process is thrown overboard 49 The sailor makes no move to help the drowning Jacques and Candide is in a state of despair until Pangloss explains to him that Lisbon harbor was created in order for Jacques to drown Only Pangloss Candide and the brutish sailor who let Jacques drown 50 survive the wreck and reach Lisbon which is promptly hit by an earthquake tsunami and fire that kill tens of thousands The sailor leaves in order to loot the rubble while Candide injured and begging for help is lectured on the optimistic view of the situation by Pangloss The next day Pangloss discusses his optimistic philosophy with a member of the Portuguese Inquisition and he and Candide are arrested for heresy set to be tortured and killed in an auto da fe set up to appease God and prevent another disaster Candide is flogged and sees Pangloss hanged but another earthquake intervenes and he escapes He is approached by an old woman 51 who leads him to a house where Lady Cunegonde waits alive Candide is surprised Pangloss had told him that Cunegonde had been raped and disemboweled She had been but Cunegonde points out that people survive such things However her rescuer sold her to a Jewish merchant Don Issachar who was then threatened by a corrupt Grand Inquisitor into sharing her Don Issachar gets Cunegonde on Mondays Wednesdays and the sabbath day Her owners arrive find her with another man and Candide kills them both Candide and the two women flee the city heading to the Americas 52 Along the way Cunegonde falls into self pity complaining of all the misfortunes that have befallen her Chapters XI XX Edit The old woman reciprocates by revealing her own tragic life born the daughter of Pope Urban X and the Princess of Palestrina she was kidnapped and enslaved by Barbary pirates witnessed violent civil wars in Morocco under the bloodthirsty King Moulay Ismail during which her mother was drawn and quartered suffered constant hunger nearly died from a plague in Algiers and had a buttock cut off to feed starving Janissaries during the Russian capture of Azov After traversing all the Russian Empire she eventually became a servant of Don Issachar and met Cunegonde The trio arrives in Buenos Aires where Governor Don Fernando d Ibarra y Figueroa y Mascarenes y Lampourdos y Souza asks to marry Cunegonde Just then an alcalde a Spanish magistrate arrives pursuing Candide for killing the Grand Inquisitor Leaving the women behind Candide flees to Paraguay with his practical and heretofore unmentioned manservant Cacambo nbsp 1787 illustration of Candide and Cacambo meeting a maimed slave from a sugarcane mill near Suriname At a border post on the way to Paraguay Cacambo and Candide speak to the commandant who turns out to be Cunegonde s unnamed brother He explains that after his family was slaughtered the Jesuits preparation for his burial revived him and he has since joined the order 52 When Candide proclaims he intends to marry Cunegonde her brother attacks him and Candide runs him through with his rapier After lamenting all the people mainly priests he has killed he and Cacambo flee In their flight Candide and Cacambo come across two naked women being chased and bitten by a pair of monkeys Candide seeking to protect the women shoots and kills the monkeys but is informed by Cacambo that the monkeys and women were probably lovers Cacambo and Candide are captured by Oreillons or Orejones members of the Inca nobility who widened the lobes of their ears and are depicted here as the fictional inhabitants of the area Mistaking Candide for a Jesuit by his robes the Oreillons prepare to cook Candide and Cacambo however Cacambo convinces the Oreillons that Candide killed a Jesuit to procure the robe Cacambo and Candide are released and travel for a month on foot and then down a river by canoe living on fruits and berries 53 After a few more adventures Candide and Cacambo wander into El Dorado a geographically isolated utopia where the streets are covered with precious stones there exist no priests and all of the king s jokes are funny 54 Candide and Cacambo stay a month in El Dorado but Candide is still in pain without Cunegonde and expresses to the king his wish to leave The king points out that this is a foolish idea but generously helps them do so The pair continue their journey now accompanied by one hundred red pack sheep carrying provisions and incredible sums of money which they slowly lose or have stolen over the next few adventures Candide and Cacambo eventually reach Suriname where they split up Cacambo travels to Buenos Aires to retrieve Lady Cunegonde while Candide prepares to travel to Europe to await the two Candide s remaining sheep are stolen and Candide is fined heavily by a Dutch magistrate for petulance over the theft Before leaving Suriname Candide feels in need of companionship so he interviews a number of local men who have been through various ill fortunes and settles on a man named Martin Chapters XXI XXX Edit This companion Martin is a Manichaean scholar based on the real life pessimist Pierre Bayle who was a chief opponent of Leibniz 55 For the remainder of the voyage Martin and Candide argue about philosophy Martin painting the entire world as occupied by fools Candide however remains an optimist at heart since it is all he knows After a detour to Bordeaux and Paris they arrive in England and see an admiral based on Admiral Byng being shot for not killing enough of the enemy Martin explains that Britain finds it necessary to shoot an admiral from time to time pour encourager les autres to encourage the others 56 Candide horrified arranges for them to leave Britain immediately Upon their arrival in Venice Candide and Martin meet Paquette the chambermaid who infected Pangloss with his syphilis She is now a prostitute and is spending her time with a Theatine monk Brother Giroflee Although both appear happy on the surface they reveal their despair Paquette has led a miserable existence as a sexual object and the monk detests the religious order in which he was indoctrinated Candide gives two thousand piastres to Paquette and one thousand to Brother Giroflee Candide and Martin visit the Lord Pococurante a noble Venetian That evening Cacambo now a slave arrives and informs Candide that Cunegonde is in Constantinople Prior to their departure Candide and Martin dine with six strangers who had come for the Carnival of Venice These strangers are revealed to be dethroned kings the Ottoman Sultan Ahmed III Emperor Ivan VI of Russia Charles Edward Stuart an unsuccessful pretender to the English throne Augustus III of Poland deprived at the time of writing of his reign in the Electorate of Saxony due to the Seven Years War Stanislaw Leszczynski and Theodore of Corsica On the way to Constantinople Cacambo reveals that Cunegonde now horribly ugly currently washes dishes on the banks of the Propontis as a slave for a Transylvanian prince by the name of Rakoczi After arriving at the Bosphorus they board a galley where to Candide s surprise he finds Pangloss and Cunegonde s brother among the rowers Candide buys their freedom and further passage at steep prices 52 They both relate how they survived but despite the horrors he has been through Pangloss s optimism remains unshaken I still hold to my original opinions because after all I m a philosopher and it wouldn t be proper for me to recant since Leibniz cannot be wrong and since pre established harmony is the most beautiful thing in the world along with the plenum and subtle matter 57 Candide the baron Pangloss Martin and Cacambo arrive at the banks of the Propontis where they rejoin Cunegonde and the old woman Cunegonde has indeed become hideously ugly but Candide nevertheless buys their freedom and marries Cunegonde to spite her brother who forbids Cunegonde from marrying anyone but a baron of the Empire he is secretly sold back into slavery Paquette and Brother Giroflee having squandered their three thousand piastres are reconciled with Candide on a small farm une petite metairie which he just bought with the last of his finances One day the protagonists seek out a dervish known as a great philosopher of the land Candide asks him why Man is made to suffer so and what they all ought to do The dervish responds by asking rhetorically why Candide is concerned about the existence of evil and good The dervish describes human beings as mice on a ship sent by a king to Egypt their comfort does not matter to the king The dervish then slams his door on the group Returning to their farm Candide Pangloss and Martin meet a Turk whose philosophy is to devote his life only to simple work and not concern himself with external affairs He and his four children cultivate a small area of land and the work keeps them free of three great evils boredom vice and poverty 58 Candide Pangloss Martin Cunegonde Paquette Cacambo the old woman and Brother Giroflee all set to work on this commendable plan louable dessein on their farm each exercising his or her own talents Candide ignores Pangloss s insistence that all turned out for the best by necessity instead telling him we must cultivate our garden il faut cultiver notre jardin 58 Style EditAs Voltaire himself described it the purpose of Candide was to bring amusement to a small number of men of wit 2 The author achieves this goal by combining wit with a parody of the classic adventure romance plot Candide is confronted with horrible events described in painstaking detail so often that it becomes humorous Literary theorist Frances K Barasch described Voltaire s matter of fact narrative as treating topics such as mass death as coolly as a weather report 59 The fast paced and improbable plot in which characters narrowly escape death repeatedly for instance allows for compounding tragedies to befall the same characters over and over again 60 In the end Candide is primarily as described by Voltaire s biographer Ian Davidson short light rapid and humorous 10 61 Behind the playful facade of Candide which has amused so many there lies very harsh criticism of contemporary European civilization which angered many others European governments such as France Prussia Portugal and England are each attacked ruthlessly by the author the French and Prussians for the Seven Years War the Portuguese for their Inquisition and the British for the execution of John Byng Organised religion too is harshly treated in Candide For example Voltaire mocks the Jesuit order of the Roman Catholic Church Aldridge provides a characteristic example of such anti clerical passages for which the work was banned while in Paraguay Cacambo remarks The Jesuits are masters of everything and the people have no money at all Here Voltaire suggests the Christian mission in Paraguay is taking advantage of the local population Voltaire depicts the Jesuits holding the indigenous peoples as slaves while they claim to be helping them 62 63 Satire Edit The main method of Candide s satire is to contrast ironically great tragedy and comedy 10 The story does not invent or exaggerate evils of the world it displays real ones starkly allowing Voltaire to simplify subtle philosophies and cultural traditions highlighting their flaws 60 Thus Candide derides optimism for instance with a deluge of horrible historical or at least plausible events with no apparent redeeming qualities 2 59 A simple example of the satire of Candide is seen in the treatment of the historic event witnessed by Candide and Martin in Portsmouth harbour There the duo spy an anonymous admiral supposed to represent John Byng being executed for failing to properly engage a French fleet The admiral is blindfolded and shot on the deck of his own ship merely to encourage the others French pour encourager les autres an expression Voltaire is credited with originating This depiction of military punishment trivializes Byng s death The dry pithy explanation to encourage the others thus satirises a serious historical event in characteristically Voltairian fashion For its classic wit this phrase has become one of the more often quoted from Candide 10 64 Voltaire depicts the worst of the world and his pathetic hero s desperate effort to fit it into an optimistic outlook Almost all of Candide is a discussion of various forms of evil its characters rarely find even temporary respite There is at least one notable exception the episode of El Dorado a fantastic village in which the inhabitants are simply rational and their society is just and reasonable The positivity of El Dorado may be contrasted with the pessimistic attitude of most of the book Even in this case the bliss of El Dorado is fleeting Candide soon leaves the village to seek Cunegonde whom he eventually marries only out of a sense of obligation 2 59 Another element of the satire focuses on what William F Bottiglia author of many published works on Candide calls the sentimental foibles of the age and Voltaire s attack on them 65 Flaws in European culture are highlighted as Candide parodies adventure and romance cliches mimicking the style of a picaresque novel 65 66 A number of archetypal characters thus have recognisable manifestations in Voltaire s work Candide is supposed to be the drifting rogue of low social class Cunegonde the sex interest Pangloss the knowledgeable mentor and Cacambo the skillful valet 2 As the plot unfolds readers find that Candide is no rogue Cunegonde becomes ugly and Pangloss is a stubborn fool The characters of Candide are unrealistic two dimensional mechanical and even marionette like they are simplistic and stereotypical 67 As the initially naive protagonist eventually comes to a mature conclusion however noncommittal the novella is a bildungsroman if not a very serious one 2 68 Garden motif Edit Gardens are thought by many critics to play a critical symbolic role in Candide The first location commonly identified as a garden is the castle of the Baron from which Candide and Cunegonde are evicted much in the same fashion as Adam and Eve are evicted from the Garden of Eden in the Book of Genesis Cyclically the main characters of Candide conclude the novel in a garden of their own making one which might represent celestial paradise The third most prominent garden is El Dorado which may be a false Eden 69 Other possibly symbolic gardens include the Jesuit pavilion the garden of Pococurante Cacambo s garden and the Turk s garden 70 These gardens are probably references to the Garden of Eden but it has also been proposed by Bottiglia for example that the gardens refer also to the Encyclopedie and that Candide s conclusion to cultivate his garden symbolises Voltaire s great support for this endeavour Candide and his companions as they find themselves at the end of the novella are in a very similar position to Voltaire s tightly knit philosophical circle which supported the Encyclopedie the main characters of Candide live in seclusion to cultivate their garden just as Voltaire suggested his colleagues leave society to write In addition there is evidence in the epistolary correspondence of Voltaire that he had elsewhere used the metaphor of gardening to describe writing the Encyclopedie 70 Another interpretative possibility is that Candide cultivating his garden suggests his engaging in only necessary occupations such as feeding oneself and fighting boredom This is analogous to Voltaire s own view on gardening he was himself a gardener at his estates in Les Delices and Ferney and he often wrote in his correspondence that gardening was an important pastime of his own it being an extraordinarily effective way to keep busy 71 72 73 Philosophy EditOptimism Edit Candide satirises various philosophical and religious theories that Voltaire had previously criticised Primary among these is Leibnizian optimism sometimes called Panglossianism after its fictional proponent which Voltaire ridicules with descriptions of seemingly endless calamity 10 Voltaire demonstrates a variety of irredeemable evils in the world leading many critics to contend that Voltaire s treatment of evil specifically the theological problem of its existence is the focus of the work 74 Heavily referenced in the text are the Lisbon earthquake disease and the sinking of ships in storms Also war thievery and murder evils of human design are explored as extensively in Candide as are environmental ills Bottiglia notes Voltaire is comprehensive in his enumeration of the world s evils He is unrelenting in attacking Leibnizian optimism 75 Fundamental to Voltaire s attack is Candide s tutor Pangloss a self proclaimed follower of Leibniz and a teacher of his doctrine Ridicule of Pangloss s theories thus ridicules Leibniz himself and Pangloss s reasoning is silly at best For example Pangloss s first teachings of the narrative absurdly mix up cause and effect Il est demontre disait il que les choses ne peuvent etre autrement car tout etant fait pour une fin tout est necessairement pour la meilleure fin Remarquez bien que les nez ont ete faits pour porter des lunettes aussi avons nous des lunettes It is demonstrable that things cannot be otherwise than as they are for as all things have been created for some end they must necessarily be created for the best end Observe for instance the nose is formed for spectacles therefore we wear spectacles 76 Following such flawed reasoning even more doggedly than Candide Pangloss defends optimism Whatever their horrendous fortune Pangloss reiterates all is for the best Tout est pour le mieux and proceeds to justify the evil event s occurrence A characteristic example of such theodicy is found in Pangloss s explanation of why it is good that syphilis exists c etait une chose indispensable dans le meilleur des mondes un ingredient necessaire car si Colomb n avait pas attrape dans une ile de l Amerique cette maladie qui empoisonne la source de la generation qui souvent meme empeche la generation et qui est evidemment l oppose du grand but de la nature nous n aurions ni le chocolat ni la cochenille it was a thing unavoidable a necessary ingredient in the best of worlds for if Columbus had not caught in an island in America this disease which contaminates the source of generation and frequently impedes propagation itself and is evidently opposed to the great end of nature we should have had neither chocolate nor cochineal 50 Candide the impressionable and incompetent student of Pangloss often tries to justify evil fails invokes his mentor and eventually despairs It is by these failures that Candide is painfully cured as Voltaire would see it of his optimism This critique of Voltaire s seems to be directed almost exclusively at Leibnizian optimism Candide does not ridicule Voltaire s contemporary Alexander Pope a later optimist of slightly different convictions Candide does not discuss Pope s optimistic principle that all is right but Leibniz s that states this is the best of all possible worlds However subtle the difference between the two Candide is unambiguous as to which is its subject Some critics conjecture that Voltaire meant to spare Pope this ridicule out of respect although Voltaire s Poeme may have been written as a more direct response to Pope s theories This work is similar to Candide in subject matter but very different from it in style the Poeme embodies a more serious philosophical argument than Candide 77 Conclusion Edit The conclusion of the novel in which Candide finally dismisses his tutor s optimism leaves unresolved what philosophy the protagonist is to accept in its stead This element of Candide has been written about voluminously perhaps above all others The conclusion is enigmatic and its analysis is contentious 78 Voltaire develops no formal systematic philosophy for the characters to adopt 79 The conclusion of the novel may be thought of not as a philosophical alternative to optimism but as a prescribed practical outlook though what it prescribes is in dispute Many critics have concluded that one minor character or another is portrayed as having the right philosophy For instance a number believe that Martin is treated sympathetically and that his character holds Voltaire s ideal philosophy pessimism Others disagree citing Voltaire s negative descriptions of Martin s principles and the conclusion of the work in which Martin plays little part 80 Within debates attempting to decipher the conclusion of Candide lies another primary Candide debate This one concerns the degree to which Voltaire was advocating a pessimistic philosophy by which Candide and his companions give up hope for a better world Critics argue that the group s reclusion on the farm signifies Candide and his companions loss of hope for the rest of the human race This view is to be compared to a reading that presents Voltaire as advocating a melioristic philosophy and a precept committing the travellers to improving the world through metaphorical gardening This debate and others focuses on the question of whether or not Voltaire was prescribing passive retreat from society or active industrious contribution to it 81 Inside vs outside interpretations Edit Separate from the debate about the text s conclusion is the inside outside controversy This argument centers on the matter of whether or not Voltaire was actually prescribing anything Roy Wolper professor emeritus of English argues in a revolutionary 1969 paper that Candide does not necessarily speak for its author that the work should be viewed as a narrative independent of Voltaire s history and that its message is entirely or mostly inside it This point of view the inside specifically rejects attempts to find Voltaire s voice in the many characters of Candide and his other works Indeed writers have seen Voltaire as speaking through at least Candide Martin and the Turk Wolper argues that Candide should be read with a minimum of speculation as to its meaning in Voltaire s personal life His article ushered in a new era of Voltaire studies causing many scholars to look at the novel differently 82 83 Critics such as Lester Crocker Henry Stavan and Vivienne Mylne find too many similarities between Candide s point of view and that of Voltaire to accept the inside view they support the outside interpretation They believe that Candide s final decision is the same as Voltaire s and see a strong connection between the development of the protagonist and his author 84 Some scholars who support the outside view also believe that the isolationist philosophy of the Old Turk closely mirrors that of Voltaire Others see a strong parallel between Candide s gardening at the conclusion and the gardening of the author 85 Martine Darmon Meyer argues that the inside view fails to see the satirical work in context and that denying that Candide is primarily a mockery of optimism a matter of historical context is a very basic betrayal of the text 86 87 Reception EditDe roman Voltaire en a fait un lequel est le resume de toutes ses œuvres Toute son intelligence etait une machine de guerre Et ce qui me le fait cherir c est le degout que m inspirent les voltairiens des gens qui rient sur les grandes choses Est ce qu il riait lui Il grincait Flaubert Correspondance ed Conard II 348 III 219 88 Voltaire made with this novel a resume of all his works His whole intelligence was a war machine And what makes me cherish it is the disgust which has been inspired in me by the Voltairians people who laugh about the important things Was he laughing Voltaire He was screeching Flaubert Correspondance ed Conard II 348 III 219 88 Though Voltaire did not openly admit to having written the controversial Candide until 1768 until then he signed with a pseudonym Monsieur le docteur Ralph or Doctor Ralph 89 his authorship of the work was hardly disputed 90 a Immediately after publication the work and its author were denounced by both secular and religious authorities because the book openly derides government and church alike It was because of such polemics that Omer Louis Francois Joly de Fleury who was Advocate General to the Parisian parliament when Candide was published found parts of Candide to be contrary to religion and morals 90 Despite much official indictment soon after its publication Candide s irreverent prose was being quoted Let us eat a Jesuit for instance became a popular phrase for its reference to a humorous passage in Candide 92 By the end of February 1759 the Grand Council of Geneva and the administrators of Paris had banned Candide 4 Candide nevertheless succeeded in selling twenty thousand to thirty thousand copies by the end of the year in over twenty editions making it a best seller The Duke de La Valliere speculated near the end of January 1759 that Candide might have been the fastest selling book ever 90 In 1762 Candide was listed in the Index Librorum Prohibitorum the Roman Catholic Church s list of prohibited books 4 Bannings of Candide lasted into the twentieth century in the United States where it has long been considered a seminal work of Western literature At least once Candide was temporarily barred from entering America in February 1929 a US customs official in Boston prevented a number of copies of the book deemed obscene 93 from reaching a Harvard University French class Candide was admitted in August of the same year however by that time the class was over 93 In an interview soon after Candide s detention the official who confiscated the book explained the office s decision to ban it But about Candide I ll tell you For years we ve been letting that book get by There were so many different editions all sizes and kinds some illustrated and some plain that we figured the book must be all right Then one of us happened to read it It s a filthy book 94 95 96 Legacy EditCandide is the most widely read of Voltaire s many works 63 and it is considered one of the great achievements of Western literature 11 William F Bottiglia opines The physical size of Candide as well as Voltaire s attitude toward his fiction precludes the achievement of artistic dimension through plenitude autonomous 3D vitality emotional resonance or poetic exaltation Candide then cannot in quantity or quality measure up to the supreme classics such as the works of Homer or Shakespeare Sophocles Chaucer Dante Cervantes Fielding Goethe Dostoevsky Tolstoy Racine or Moliere 97 Bottiglia instead calls it a miniature classic but others have been more forgiving of its size 11 97 As the only work of Voltaire which has remained popular up to the present day 98 Candide is listed in Harold Bloom s The Western Canon The Books and School of the Ages It is included in the Encyclopaedia Britannica collection Great Books of the Western World 99 Candide has influenced modern writers of black humour such as Celine Joseph Heller John Barth Thomas Pynchon Kurt Vonnegut and Terry Southern Its parody and picaresque methods have become favourites of black humorists 100 Charles Brockden Brown an early American novelist may have been directly affected by Voltaire whose work he knew well Mark Kamrath professor of English describes the strength of the connection between Candide and Brown s Edgar Huntly or Memoirs of a Sleep Walker 1799 An unusually large number of parallels crop up in the two novels particularly in terms of characters and plot For instance the protagonists of both novels are romantically involved with a recently orphaned young woman Furthermore in both works the brothers of the female lovers are Jesuits and each is murdered although under different circumstances 101 Some twentieth century novels that may have been influenced by Candide are some dystopian science fiction works Armand Mattelart a French critic sees Candide in Aldous Huxley s Brave New World George Orwell s Nineteen Eighty Four and Yevgeny Zamyatin s We three canonical works of the genre Specifically Mattelart writes that in each of these works there exist references to Candide s popularisation of the phrase the best of all possible worlds He cites as evidence for example that the French version of Brave New World was entitled Le Meilleur des mondes lit The best of worlds 102 Readers of Candide often compare it with certain works of the modern genre the Theatre of the Absurd Haydn Mason a Voltaire scholar sees in Candide a few similarities to this brand of literature For instance he notes commonalities of Candide and Waiting for Godot 1952 In both of these works and in a similar manner friendship provides emotional support for characters when they are confronted with harshness of their existences 103 However Mason qualifies the conte must not be seen as a forerunner of the absurd in modern fiction Candide s world has many ridiculous and meaningless elements but human beings are not totally deprived of the ability to make sense out of it 104 John Pilling biographer of Beckett does state that Candide was an early and powerful influence on Beckett s thinking 105 Rosa Luxemburg in the aftermath of the First World War remarked upon re reading Candide Before the war I would have thought this wicked compilation of all human misery a caricature Now it strikes me as altogether realistic 106 The American alternative rock band Bloodhound Gang refer to Candide in their song Take the Long Way Home from the American edition of their 1999 album Hooray for Boobies Derivative works Edit In 1760 one year after Voltaire published Candide a sequel was published with the name Candide ou l optimisme seconde partie 107 This work is attributed both to Thorel de Campigneulles a writer unknown today and Henri Joseph Du Laurens who is suspected of having habitually plagiarised Voltaire 108 The story continues in this sequel with Candide having new adventures in the Ottoman Empire Persia and Denmark Part II has potential use in studies of the popular and literary receptions of Candide but is almost certainly apocryphal 107 In total by the year 1803 at least ten imitations of Candide or continuations of its story were published by authors other than Voltaire 90 Candide was adapted for the radio anthology program On Stage in 1953 Richard Chandlee wrote the script Elliott Lewis Cathy Lewis Edgar Barrier Byron Kane Jack Kruschen Howard McNear Larry Thor Martha Wentworth and Ben Wright performed 109 nbsp Leonard Bernstein in 1955The operetta Candide was originally conceived by playwright Lillian Hellman as a play with incidental music Leonard Bernstein the American composer and conductor who wrote the music was so excited about the project that he convinced Hellman to do it as a comic operetta 110 Many lyricists worked on the show including James Agee Dorothy Parker John Latouche Richard Wilbur Leonard and Felicia Bernstein and Hellman Hershy Kay orchestrated all the pieces except for the overture which Bernstein did himself 111 Candide first opened on Broadway as a musical on 1 December 1956 The premier production was directed by Tyrone Guthrie and conducted by Samuel Krachmalnick 111 While this production was a box office flop the music was highly praised and an original cast album was made The album gradually became a cult hit but Hellman s libretto was criticised as being too serious an adaptation of Voltaire s novel 112 Candide has been revised and reworked several times The first New York revival directed by Hal Prince featured an entirely new libretto by Hugh Wheeler and additional lyrics by Stephen Sondheim Bernstein revised the work again in 1987 with the collaboration of John Mauceri and John Wells After Bernstein s death further revised productions of the musical were performed in versions prepared by Trevor Nunn and John Caird in 1999 and Mary Zimmerman in 2010 Candido ovvero un sogno fatto in Sicilia it 1977 or simply Candido is a book by Leonardo Sciascia It was at least partly based on Voltaire s Candide although the actual influence of Candide on Candido is a hotly debated topic A number of theories on the matter have been proposed Proponents of one say that Candido is very similar to Candide only with a happy ending supporters of another claim that Voltaire provided Sciascia with only a starting point from which to work that the two books are quite distinct 113 114 The BBC produced a television adaptation in 1973 with Ian Ogilvy as Candide Emrys James as Dr Pangloss and Frank Finlay as Voltaire himself acting as the narrator 115 Nedim Gursel wrote his 2001 novel Le voyage de Candide a Istanbul about a minor passage in Candide during which its protagonist meets Ahmed III the deposed Turkish sultan This chance meeting on a ship from Venice to Istanbul is the setting of Gursel s book 116 Terry Southern in writing his popular novel Candy with Mason Hoffenberg adapted Candide for a modern audience and changed the protagonist from male to female Candy deals with the rejection of a sort of optimism which the author sees in women s magazines of the modern era Candy also parodies pornography and popular psychology This adaptation of Candide was adapted for the cinema by director Christian Marquand in 1968 117 In addition to the above Candide was made into a number of minor films and theatrical adaptations throughout the twentieth century For a list of these see Voltaire Candide ou L Optimisme et autres contes 1989 with preface and commentaries by Pierre Malandain 118 In May 2009 a play titled Optimism based on Candide opened at the CUB Malthouse Theatre in Melbourne It followed the basic story of Candide incorporating anachronisms music and stand up comedy from comedian Frank Woodley It toured Australia and played at the Edinburgh International Festival 119 In 2010 the Icelandic writer ottar M Nordfjord published a rewriting and modernisation of Candide titled Orvitinn eda hugsjonamadurinn See also EditCandide ou l optimisme au XXe siecle film 1960 List of French language authors Cannibalism in popular culture PollyannaExplanatory notes Edit Will Durant in The Age of Voltaire It was published early in 1759 as Candide ou l optimisme purportedly translated from the German of Dr Ralph with additions found in the pocket of the Doctor when he died at Minden The Great Council of Geneva almost at once March 5 ordered it to be burned Of course Voltaire denied his authorship people must have lost their senses he wrote to a friendly pastor in Geneva to attribute to me that pack of nonsense I have thank God better occupations But France was unanimous no other man could have written Candide Here was that deceptively simple smoothly flowing lightly prancing impishly ironic prose that only he could write here and there a little obscenity a little scatology everywhere a playful darting lethal irreverence if the style is the man this had to be Voltaire 91 References EditCitations Edit Wootton 2000 p 1 a b c d e f g h i j Aldridge 1975 pp 251 254 a b Davidson 2005 pp 52 53 a b c d e f Williams 1997 pp 1 3 Candide Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Longman Retrieved 17 August 2019 Candide ou L optimisme traduit de l allemand de M le docteur Ralph 1 ed 1759 Retrieved 27 May 2015 via Gallica Critical Survey of Short Fiction 2001 Pangloss Mason 1992 p 10 a b c d e f g Davidson 2005 p 54 a b c Aldridge 1975 p 260 Waldinger 1987 p ix Wade 1959b p 88 a b Radner amp Radner 1998 pp 669 686 Mason 1992 p 4 Wade 1959b p 93 Wade 1959b pp 88 93 Grimmelshausen 1669 Havens 1973 pp 844 845 Wade 1959b p 296 Broome 1960 p 510 Means 2006 pp 1 3 Gopnik 2005 McGhee 1943 pp 438 440 Aldridge 1975 p 155 Mason 1970 pp 19 35 Wade 1959a p 65 Torrey 1929 p 446 a b c Wade 1956 pp 3 4 Havens 1932 p 225 Wade 1959b pp 145 156 Rouillard 1962 Wade 1957 p 94 Torrey 1929 pp 445 447 Wade 1959b p 182 a b Wade 1959a pp 63 88 Wade 1957 p 96 Voltaire 1759 1959 Taylor 1979 p 207 Williams 1997 p 97 Bellhouse 2006 p 780 Bellhouse 2006 p 756 Bellhouse 2006 p 757 Bellhouse 2006 p 769 Waldinger 1987 p 23 Williams 1997 pp 26 27 Beck 1999 p 203 Leister 1985 pp 32 33 The 1569 story of Dirk Willems illustrated by Mennonite Jan Luyken in Martyrs Mirror 1685 a b Smollett 2008 Ch 4 matelot furieux Ch 7 la vieille a b c Ayer 1986 pp 143 145 Voltaire Candide XVIII Aldridge 1975 p 254 Wootton 2000 p xvii This is the most famous quote from the novel See Alex Massie Pour encourager les autres Oui monsieur Archived 2014 01 08 at the Wayback Machine The Spectator 31 July 2007 Voltaire 1759 1959 pp 107 108 a b Voltaire 1759 1959 p 112 113 a b c Barasch 1985 p 3 a b Starobinski 1976 p 194 Wade 1959b p 133 Aldridge 1975 p 255 a b Ayer 1986 p 139 Havens 1973 p 843 a b Bottiglia 1968 pp 89 92 Vannini 2011 pp 106 107 Wade 1959b pp 303 305 Waldinger 1987 p 20 Readings on Candide 2001 p 92 a b Bottiglia 1951 pp 727 731 Davidson 2005 p 55 Scherr 1993 Aldridge 1975 p 258 Readings on Candide 2001 p 121 Bottiglia 1951 p 720 Smollett 2008 Ch 1 Aldridge 1975 pp 251 254 361 Leister 1985 p 29 Bottiglia 1951 pp 723 724 Bottiglia 1951 p 726 Leister 1985 p 26 Braun Sturzer Meyer 1988 Wolper 1969 pp 265 277 Bottiglia 1951 pp 719 720 Braun Sturzer amp Meyer 1988 pp 569 571 Braun Sturzer amp Meyer 1988 p 574 Crocker 1971 a b Voltaire 1759 1931 p vii Wade 1959b p xiii a b c d Mason 1992 pp 13 15 Will Durant 1965 The Story of Civilization Volume 9 The Age of Voltaire Simon amp Schuster p 724 Mason 1992 ch 3 a b Haight 1970 p 33 Hobbs 1930 p 190 Bowerman 1931 p 20 Boyer 2002 p 209 a b Bottiglia 1959 pp 247 248 Mason 1992 ch 2 Britannica 2008 Readings on Candide 2001 pp 112 113 Kamrath 1991 pp 5 14 Monty 2006 p 5 Mason 1992 pp 33 37 Mason 1992 p 98 Monty 2006 p 151 Young James D 1988 Socialism Since 1889 A Biographical History Rowman amp Littlefield p 91 a b Astbury 2005 p 503 Clark 1993 pp VIII IX Grams Martin 2008 02 27 Radio drama a comprehensive chronicle of American network programs 1932 1962 Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 978 0786438716 OCLC 188535974 Peyser 1987 p 247 a b Peyser 1987 p 248 Peyser 1987 pp 249 251 Morrison 2002 p 59 Burns 2000 p 992 Candide Collections Search British Film Institute n d Retrieved 23 July 2018 Hitchins 2002 p 160 Silva 2000 pp 784 785 Malandain 1989 Boztas 2009 General and cited sources Edit Aldridge Alfred Owen 1975 Voltaire and the Century of Light Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 06287 0 Astbury Kate April 2005 Candide ou l optimisme seconde partie 1760 Jean Francois Marmontel un intellectuel exemplaire au siecle des Lumieres Modern Language Review Modern Humanities Research Association 100 2 EBSCO Accession Number 16763209 Ayer A J 1986 Voltaire New York City Random House ISBN 0 394 54798 5 Barasch Frances K Winter 1985 The Grotesque as a Comic Genre Modern Language Studies 15 1 3 11 doi 10 2307 3194413 JSTOR 3194413 Beck Ervin Summer 1999 Voltaire s Candide Explicator 57 4 203 204 doi 10 1080 00144949909596872 EBSCO Accession Number 2336667 Bellhouse Mary L December 2006 Candide Shoots the Monkey Lovers Representing Black Men in Eighteenth Century French Visual Culture Political Theory Sage Publications 34 6 756 doi 10 1177 0090591706293020 S2CID 144392810 Bottiglia William F September 1951 Candide s Garden PMLA 66 5 718 733 720 doi 10 2307 459532 JSTOR 459532 S2CID 163821740 Bottiglia William F 1959 Besterman Theodore ed Voltaire sCandide Analysis of a Classic Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century Vol VII Institut et Musee Voltaire OCLC 185848340 Bottiglia William F 1968 Voltaire a collection of critical essays Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall Inc OCLC 440167 Bowerman George F 1931 Censorship and the Public Library Ayer Publishing ISBN 0 8369 0232 7 Boyer Paul S 2002 Purity in Print Book Censorship in America from the Gilded Age to the Computer Age University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 17584 7 Boztas Senay 2009 Interview Frank Woodley Candide laughter Scotland on Sunday Archived from the original on 2013 01 04 Retrieved 2009 11 14 Braun Theodore E D March 1988 Teaching Candide A Debate The French Review 61 4 569 571 JSTOR 393842 Britannica 2008 Great Books of the Western World A Collection of the Greatest Writings in Western History PDF Britannica Archived from the original PDF on 2006 08 13 Retrieved 2008 06 22 Broome J H 1960 Voltaire and Fougeret de Monbron a Candide Problem Reconsidered The Modern Language Review 55 4 509 518 doi 10 2307 3721375 JSTOR 3721375 Burns Jennefer October 2000 Telling tales about Impegno Commitment and hindsight in Vittorini and Calvino The Modern Language Review 95 4 992 1006 doi 10 2307 3736629 JSTOR 3736629 Gale Document Number A80191130 Crocker Lester G Autumn 1971 Professor Wolper s Interpretation of Candide Eighteenth Century Studies 5 1 145 156 Davidson Ian 2005 Voltaire in Exile New York Grove Press p 53 ISBN 0 8021 1791 0 Dawson Deidre January 1 1986 In Search of the Real Pangloss The Correspondence of Voltaire with the Duchess of Saxe Gotha Yale French Studies 71 Men Women of Letters 93 112 doi 10 2307 2930024 ISSN 0044 0078 JSTOR 2930024 Gopnik Adam 2005 Voltaire s Garden New Yorker Conde Nast Publications 81 3 Haight Anne Lyon 1970 Banned Books Informal Notes on Some Books Banned for Various Reasons at Various Times and in Various Places ISBN 0 8352 0204 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Havens George R April 1932 The Composition of Voltaire s Candide Modern Language Notes 47 4 225 234 doi 10 2307 2913581 JSTOR 2913581 Havens George R May 1973 Some Notes on Candide Modern Language Notes 88 4 French Issue 841 847 doi 10 2307 2907412 JSTOR 2907412 Hitchins Keith Summer Autumn 2002 Le voyage de Candide a Istanbul World Literature Today 76 3 4 doi 10 2307 40157767 JSTOR 40157767 EBSCO Accession Number 9209009 Hobbs Perry 2 April 1930 Dirty Hands A Federal Customs Official Looks at Art The New Republic Kamrath Mark L 1991 Brown and the Enlightenment A study of the influence of Voltaire s Candide in Edgar Huntly The American Transcendental Quarterly 5 1 Leister Elizabeth Cooney 1985 Voltaire sCandide Barron s book notes Woodbury NY Barron s Educational Series Inc ISBN 0 8120 3505 4 Malandain Pierre 1989 Voltaire Candide ou L Optimisme et autres contes Pocket ISBN 2 266 08266 3 Mason H T January 1970 Voltaire s Contes An Etat Present The Modern Language Review 65 1 19 35 doi 10 2307 3722784 JSTOR 3722784 Mason Haydn 1992 Candide Optimism Demolished Twayne s Masterwork Studies New York City Twayne Publishers ISBN 0 8057 8085 8 McGhee Dorothy M 1943 The Conte Philosophique Bridging a Century PMLA Modern Language Association 58 2 438 449 doi 10 2307 459053 JSTOR 459053 S2CID 163776697 Means Richard 2006 Voltaire Background and Early Writing Great Neck Publishing ISBN 1429806540 EBSCOhost Accession Number 19358655 Monty Julie Anne Textualizing the Future Godard Rochefort Beckett and Dystopian Discourse PDF The University of Texas at Austin Archived from the original PDF on 2008 12 18 Retrieved 2008 07 05 Morrison Ian R January 2002 Leonardo Sciascia s Candido and Voltaire s Candide Modern Language Review 97 1 59 71 doi 10 2307 3735619 JSTOR 3735619 S2CID 162092688 EBSCO Accession Number 6388910 Oxford Color French Dictionary Plus New York Oxford University Press Inc 2004 p 42 ISBN 0 19 860898 5 Peyser Joan 1987 Bernstein a biography New York Beech Tree Books ISBN 0 688 04918 4 Radner Daisie October 1998 Optimality in biology Pangloss or Leibniz Monist 81 4 669 686 doi 10 5840 monist199881433 JSTOR 27903615 EBSCO Accession Number 1713757 Rouillard C D November 1962 Review of Voltaire and Candide A Study in the Fusion of History Art and Philosophy Modern Philology 60 2 145 149 doi 10 1086 389529 JSTOR 434858 Scherr Arthur Spring 1993 Voltaire s Candide a tale of women s equality The Midwest Quarterly 34 3 261 282 Thomson Gale Document Number A13877067 Silva Edward T 1974 From Candide to Candy Love s Labor Lost Journal of Popular Culture 8 4 783 791 doi 10 1111 j 0022 3840 1975 00783 x ISSN 0022 3840 EBSCO Accession Number 1975201832 Smollett Tobias 2008 Candide Wikisource The Free Library Retrieved 2008 05 29 Starobinski Jean Summer 1976 Sur le Style Philosophique de Candide Comparative Literature 28 3 193 200 doi 10 2307 1769217 JSTOR 1769217 Taylor O R Vercruysse Jeroom 1979 Review Les Editions encadrees des Œuvres de Voltaire de 1775 The Modern Language Review 74 1 207 doi 10 2307 3726968 JSTOR 3726968 Torrey Norman L November 1929 The Date of Composition of Candide and Voltaire s Corrections Modern Language Notes 44 7 445 447 446 doi 10 2307 2913558 JSTOR 2913558 Vannini Giulio 2011 Il Satyricon di Petronio nel Candide di Voltaire Antike und Abendland 57 94 108 doi 10 1515 9783110239171 94 ISSN 1613 0421 S2CID 170870726 Voltaire 1931 1759 Morize Andre ed Candide ou L optimisme edition critique avec une introd et un commentaire par Andre Morize Paris a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Voltaire 1959 1759 Bair Lowell ed Candide translated by Lowell Bair with an appreciation by Andre Maurois illustrations by Sheilah Beckett New York Bantam Dell ISBN 0 553 21166 8 Wade Ira O October 1956 The La Valliere MS of Candide The French Review 30 1 Wade Ira O 15 February 1957 A Manuscript of Voltaire s Candide Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 101 1 93 105 JSTOR 985142 Wade Ira O 1959a The First Edition of Candide A Problem of Identification The Princeton University Library Chronicle 20 2 63 88 doi 10 2307 26403294 JSTOR 26403294 OCLC 810544747 Wade Ira O 1959b Voltaire andCandide A Study in the Fusion of History Art and Philosophy Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 8046 1688 4 Library of Congress number 59 11085 Waldinger Renee 1987 Approaches to Teaching Voltaire sCandide New York The Modern Language Association of America ISBN 0 87352 503 5 Walsh Thomas 2001 Readings on Candide Literary Companion to World Literature San Diego CA Greenhaven Press ISBN 0 7377 0362 8 Williams David 1997 Voltaire Candide Spain Grand amp Cutler Ltd ISBN 0 7293 0395 0 Wolper Roy S Winter 1969 Candide Gull in the Garden Eighteenth Century Studies 3 2 265 277 doi 10 2307 2737575 JSTOR 2737575 Wootton David 2000 Candideand Related Texts Hackett Publishing Company Inc ISBN 0 87220 547 9 Grimmelshausen H J Chr 1669 Der abentheurliche Simplicissimus The adventurous Simplicissimus in German Nuremberg J Fillion OCLC 22567416 Further reading EditAdorno Theodor W 1970 Redmond Dennis ed Negative Dialectics Frankfurt am Main Suhrkamp Verlag ISBN 0 7456 3510 5 Retrieved 2007 07 28 Betts C J April 1985 On the Beginning and Ending of Candide The Modern Language Review 80 2 283 292 doi 10 2307 3728661 JSTOR 3728661 Cates David Allan Comparing Candide and X Out of Wonderland PDF XOutofWonderland com Archived from the original PDF on 2008 02 16 Retrieved 2008 01 06 Gullace Giovanni 1985 Il Candide nel pensiero di Voltaire Napoli Societa editrice napoletana Gullette Cameron C December 1934 Fanfluche Cousin of Candide The French Review 8 2 93 107 Henry Patrick Spring 1977 Travel in Candide Moving On But Going Nowhere Papers on Language amp Literature 13 2 193 197 ISSN 0031 1294 EBSCO Accession Number 7728974 Henry Patrick Winter 1977 Time in Candide Studies in Short Fiction 14 1 86 88 ISSN 0039 3789 EBSCO Accession Number 7150968 Henry Patrick Spring 1977 Working in Candide s Garden Studies in Short Fiction 14 2 183 184 ISSN 0039 3789 EBSCO Accession Number 7153217 Henry Patrick 1987 Contre Barthes Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century 249 Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved 2007 07 10 Howells R J April 1985 Cette Boucherie Heroique Candide as Carnival The Modern Language Review 80 2 293 303 doi 10 2307 3728662 JSTOR 3728662 Kirby David Summer 1993 The new Candide or what I learned in the theory wars Virginia Quarterly Review 69 3 393 407 ISSN 0042 675X EBSCO Accession Number 9308316577 Lynch James J January 1985 Romance Conventions in Voltaire s Candide South Atlantic Review 50 1 35 46 doi 10 2307 3199529 JSTOR 3199529 Marsh Leonard Spring 2004 Voltaire s Candide Explicator 62 3 144 146 doi 10 1080 00144940409597202 ISSN 0014 4940 S2CID 162339127 EBSCO Accession Number 13275608 Oake Roger B Wade Ira O Spring 1961 Review of Voltaire and Candide Comparative Literature 13 2 176 178 doi 10 2307 1768579 JSTOR 1768579 Scherr Arthur Winter 2001 Voltaire s Candide Explicator 59 2 74 76 doi 10 1080 00144940109597087 S2CID 162381012 EBSCO Accession Number 4423176 Sturm Mary J Parsell David B 2001 Critical Survey of Short Fiction Second Revised ed Salem Press Inc ISBN 0 89356 006 5 EBSCO Accession Number MOL0120000549 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Candide nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Candide Sister project links Edit Voltaire 1759 Candide Translated by Tobias Smollett via Wikisource Voltaire Candide in French via Wikisource Editions Edit Candide at Standard Ebooks Candide at Project Gutenberg plain text and HTML Candide at Internet Archive scanned books original editions color illustrated nbsp Candide public domain audiobook at LibriVox Candide original version with 2200 English annotations at Tailored Texts Candide ou l optimisme traduit de l allemand De Mr le Docteur Ralph 1759 Candide ou l optimisme Par Mr de Voltaire Edition revue corrigee amp augmentee par L Auteur vol 1 vol 2 aux delices 1761 1763 La Valliere Manuscript at http gallica bnf fr Miscellaneous Edit Candide Illustrations of a classic bibliography of illustrated editions list of available electronic editions and more useful information from Trier University Library Voltaire s Candide a public wiki dedicated to Candide Brief Bibliography for the Study of Candide issued by the Voltaire Society of America Podcast lecture on Candide from Dr Martin Evans at Stanford University via iTunes Portals nbsp Writing nbsp Books nbsp Literature nbsp Novels nbsp Philosophy nbsp France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Candide amp oldid 1180206181, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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