Analysis of "Le Tartuffe" by Molière: Characters, Themes, and Religious Context

 
Molière, 
Le Tartuffe,
1669
 
Defining France, week 14
 
Tartuffe
 
Name = hypocrisy
‘type character’ – the ‘dévot’,
the ‘faux dévot’
Not a priest so he can marry
 
Orgon
 
Bourgeois
Desire to believe
Insecure
Long history of being religious, a good
Christian like many in the audience
 
Cléante and Elmire
 
Cléante:
Voice of reason
‘Sans cesse vous prêchez des
maximes de vivre’ I, 1
Not comic
Elmire:
Orgon’s 2
nd
 wife
Serious character
Object of Tartuffe’s desire
 
The Younger Generation
 
Damis:
Exiled
Importance of family honour
Mariane:
‘inefficace?’
Threat of her marriage
Valère
Mariane’s lover
 
Other characters
 
Dorine:
Voice of reason along with Cléante
‘suivante’
Subversive but acts in the family interest
From outside the household:
Monsieur Loyal
L’Exempt
 
Major Themes
 
Religion
Hypocrisy
Household
Masks
Theatricality
 
Religion
 
‘To enjoy 
Tartuffe
 it is important to know that
to Molière’s contemporaries every aspect of
religion was an absorbing topic, but that one
did not write about it in a comedy.’
Gaston Hall, 
Molière: Tartuffe
 (Southampton: The Camelot
Press, 1977), p. 7
French Wars of Religion, 1562-1598
Dragonnades
Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1685
 
Religion
 
Jesuits and Jansenists
Compagnie du Saint-Sacrement
Survey of nation’s morals
directeurs de conscience’
Richelieu and Mazarin
Banned 1660
Role in Tartuffe’s censorship in 1664?
Charpy de Sainte-Croix and Bendinelli
 
Religion
 
How to practice religion:
Religion is serious
Hair shirt, his scrounge, the whip
‘Que vous alliez vêtue ainsi qu’une princesse’, I, 1
Actors excommunicated
Pascal – hair shirt and belt with inward iron spikes
 
Religion and Hypocrisy
 
‘Voulez-vous qu’il y coure à vos heures précises, |
Comme ceux qui n’y vont que pour être apercus?’ II,
2
Religion vs. façade of religion
Use of religious language – gallant, poetic and
religious language for seduction, III, 3
Hypocrisy a mortal sin
 
Satire
 
‘Gros et gras, le teint frais,
et la bouche vermeille.’ I,
4
Hyperbole and satire
Tradition continued today
 
Household
 
Orgon 358 lines, Dorine 339
Father as head of household
‘Faites que votre fils se taise ou se retire’, V, 4
Jacques Guicharnaud ‘Orgon’s entourage reacts to
him rather like subjects would toward a king
[devoted]… to a bad minister.’
Cited in Gaston Hall, 
Comedy in Context: Essays on
Molière 
(Jackson: University Press of Mississippi,
 
1984),
p. 145
 
Masks and Theatricality
 
Elmire’s second encounter with Tartuffe
En mettant le théâtre sur le théâtre,
Molière peut, par un procédé d’ironie
dramatique, démontrer le mécanisme
même de l’illusion : l’apparence se
révèle comme le seul moyen de montrer
la vérité. C’est toute la force du théâtre
qui, se donnant pour illusoire, ne ment
pas et dit le vrai
.’
Jean Serroy, ‘Préface’, in Molière, 
Le
Tartuffe
 (Paris: Gallimard, 2014), pp. 7-30
(pp. 24-5).
 
Masks and Theatricality
 
Hypocrite to impostor
L’Exempt
Deus ex machina/Rex ex machina
 
Molière and ‘Classicism’
 
Central tenets: unities, alexandrine, acts and scenes,
vraisemblance, biensénace
Alexandrine:
Verse to imitate real life
5 acts to ennoble the play?
Hint of tragic?
 
Molière and ‘Classicism’
 
Unity of place:
household
Unity of time:
‘trois heures’, mentions of time throughout the play
Unity of action:
around the character Tartuffe
 
Molière and ‘Classicism’
 
Vraisemblance
Then vs. now – careful in our perceptions
Bienséance
Declaration, 16 April 1641, forbade ‘
actions
malhonnêtes’
, ‘
paroles lascives ou à double entente qui
puissant blesser l’honnêteté publique
’.
Tartuffe’s seduction of Elmire as shocking
Obedience to the rules vs. their expansion
 
Comedy
 
The comedy of gesture
The comedy of the language
The comedy of characters
The comedy of the situation
The comedy of manners or ‘la comédie de mœurs’
 
Comedy of Gesture
 
(Mariane se recule avec surprise)
’ II, 1
il fait mime de grande résistance
’ II, 4
(Elle recule sa chaise, et Tartuffe rapproche la sienne)
’ III,
3
 
Comedy of Gesture
 
Damis in the cupboard III, 4
Orgon under the table as
Tartuffe attempts to seduce
Elmire, IV, 5
 
Comedy of Language
 
Language: what it says vs. what it means, III, 4
Henri Bergson, 
Le Rire. Essai sur la signification du
comique
 (1900)
Repetition: ‘Et Tartuffe?’, ‘Le pauvre homme!’ I, 4
 
Comedy of Character
 
Conflict:
Orgon vs. Dorine
Orgon vs. Cléante
Tartuffe: those for and against him
Exaggeration:
Orgon’s readiness to believe
Reflexion on our own weaknesses
 
Comedy of Situation
 
Reversal of situations
Mikhail Bakhtin, 
Rabelais and His World 
(1941)
‘Carnevalesque’
 
Comedy of Manners
 
Comédie de mœurs
Characteristic traits of social class, stock characters
Satire: parody, burlesque, exaggeration, irony
‘Comédie’ vs. comedy
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"Le Tartuffe," written by Molière in 1669, delves into themes of religion, hypocrisy, and the interplay of characters within a bourgeois household. The story revolves around Tartuffe, a hypocritical character who manipulates the head of the household, Orgon, while others like Cléante and Elmire serve as voices of reason. The younger generation, including Damis and Mariane, grapple with familial honor and personal relationships. Alongside the main characters, Dorine and Monsieur Loyal add depth to the narrative. The play explores the serious themes of religion, the masks people wear in society, and the theatricality of human behavior.

  • Molière
  • Le Tartuffe
  • Characters
  • Themes
  • Religion

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  1. Molire, Le Tartuffe, 1669 Defining France, week 14

  2. Tartuffe Name = hypocrisy type character the d vot , the faux d vot Not a priest so he can marry

  3. Orgon Bourgeois Desire to believe Insecure Long history of being religious, a good Christian like many in the audience

  4. Clante and Elmire Cl ante: Voice of reason Sans cesse vous pr chez des maximes de vivre I, 1 Not comic Elmire: Orgon s 2ndwife Serious character Object of Tartuffe s desire

  5. The Younger Generation Damis: Exiled Importance of family honour Mariane: inefficace? Threat of her marriage Val re Mariane s lover

  6. Other characters Dorine: Voice of reason along with Cl ante suivante Subversive but acts in the family interest From outside the household: Monsieur Loyal L Exempt

  7. Major Themes Religion Hypocrisy Household Masks Theatricality

  8. Religion To enjoy Tartuffe it is important to know that to Moli re s contemporaries every aspect of religion was an absorbing topic, but that one did not write about it in a comedy. Gaston Hall, Moli re: Tartuffe (Southampton: The Camelot Press, 1977), p. 7 French Wars of Religion, 1562-1598 Dragonnades Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1685

  9. Religion Jesuits and Jansenists Compagnie du Saint-Sacrement Survey of nation s morals directeurs de conscience Richelieu and Mazarin Banned 1660 Role in Tartuffe s censorship in 1664? Charpy de Sainte-Croix and Bendinelli

  10. Religion How to practice religion: Religion is serious Hair shirt, his scrounge, the whip Que vous alliez v tue ainsi qu une princesse , I, 1 Actors excommunicated Pascal hair shirt and belt with inward iron spikes

  11. Religion and Hypocrisy Voulez-vous qu il y coure vos heures pr cises, | Comme ceux qui n y vont que pour tre apercus? II, 2 Religion vs. fa ade of religion Use of religious language gallant, poetic and religious language for seduction, III, 3 Hypocrisy a mortal sin

  12. Satire Gros et gras, le teint frais, et la bouche vermeille. I, 4 Hyperbole and satire Tradition continued today

  13. Household Orgon 358 lines, Dorine 339 Father as head of household Faites que votre fils se taise ou se retire , V, 4 Jacques Guicharnaud Orgon s entourage reacts to him rather like subjects would toward a king [devoted] to a bad minister. Cited in Gaston Hall, Comedy in Context: Essays on Moli re (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1984), p. 145

  14. Masks and Theatricality Elmire s second encounter with Tartuffe En mettant le th tre sur le th tre, Moli re peut, par un proc d d ironie dramatique, d montrer le m canisme m me de l illusion : l apparence se r v le comme le seul moyen de montrer la v rit . C est toute la force du th tre qui, se donnant pour illusoire, ne ment pas et dit le vrai. Jean Serroy, Pr face , in Moli re, Le Tartuffe (Paris: Gallimard, 2014), pp. 7-30 (pp. 24-5).

  15. Masks and Theatricality Hypocrite to impostor L Exempt Deus ex machina/Rex ex machina

  16. Molire and Classicism Central tenets: unities, alexandrine, acts and scenes, vraisemblance, biens nace Alexandrine: Verse to imitate real life 5 acts to ennoble the play? Hint of tragic?

  17. Molire and Classicism Unity of place: household Unity of time: trois heures , mentions of time throughout the play Unity of action: around the character Tartuffe

  18. Molire and Classicism Vraisemblance Then vs. now careful in our perceptions Biens ance Declaration, 16 April 1641, forbade actions malhonn tes , paroles lascives ou double entente qui puissant blesser l honn tet publique . Tartuffe s seduction of Elmire as shocking Obedience to the rules vs. their expansion

  19. Comedy The comedy of gesture The comedy of the language The comedy of characters The comedy of the situation The comedy of manners or la com die de m urs

  20. Comedy of Gesture (Mariane se recule avec surprise) II, 1 il fait mime de grande r sistance II, 4 (Elle recule sa chaise, et Tartuffe rapproche la sienne) III, 3

  21. Comedy of Gesture Damis in the cupboard III, 4 Orgon under the table as Tartuffe attempts to seduce Elmire, IV, 5

  22. Comedy of Language Language: what it says vs. what it means, III, 4 Henri Bergson, Le Rire. Essai sur la signification du comique (1900) Repetition: Et Tartuffe? , Le pauvre homme! I, 4

  23. Comedy of Character Conflict: Orgon vs. Dorine Orgon vs. Cl ante Tartuffe: those for and against him Exaggeration: Orgon s readiness to believe Reflexion on our own weaknesses

  24. Comedy of Situation Reversal of situations Mikhail Bakhtin, Rabelais and His World (1941) Carnevalesque

  25. Comedy of Manners Com die de m urs Characteristic traits of social class, stock characters Satire: parody, burlesque, exaggeration, irony Com die vs. comedy

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