Survey							
                            
		                
		                * Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
By: Moliere Presented By: Jaimie Goss Kaitlyn McClung James Rasalam Shardaya Weems  Orgon’s mother  Believed Tartuffe to be godly and should be respected as a saint  Didn’t want Orgon to let Tartuffe go because she saw Tartuffe as a saint  Elmire’s husband  Blinded by Tartuffe’s “loyalty”  Believed Tartuffe over his own family and would do what Tartuffe said was the smart idea  Orgon’s wife  Sees through Tartuffe’s lies  Later deceives Tartuffe in order to make Orgon see the real criminal that he is  Orgon’s son  Elmire’s stepson  Never thinks before he acts. He always rushes into things which later create problems within him and his family  Orgon’s daughter  Elmire’s stepdaughter  In love with Valere  Almost married Tartuffe under father’s command  Lets her father control her life Childish and naive  In love with Marianne  He is charming like Prince Charming from Sleeping Beauty  Respects Marianne and wants her to make her own decisions  He also respects Orgon and his choices  Orgon’s brother- in- law  tries to help the family with Tartuffe because he also believes that Tartuffe is a fraud  A hypocrite, False prophet  Cunning  Reminds people of Honest John from Pinocchio Tries to steal everything from the family  Betrothed to Marianne but infatuated with Elmire  Marianne’s lady’s- maid  Not afraid to speak her mind and opinions  Does not follow rules and she acts as part of the family instead of a maid  She is kind of like Danielle from Ever After  Monsieur Loyal- a bailiff; told the family that they had to leave under Tartuffe’s orders; seduced by Tartuffe  Police Officer- loyal to the Prince (King Louis XIV) instead of Tartuffe  Flipote- Madame Pernelle’s manservant, does not get treated well  Focuses on Orgon’s desire to preserve control in his family. Using his authority as her father, Orgon plans to force Marianne to marry Tartuffe. Tartuffe attempts to seduce Elmire. Elmire tries to reveal Tartuffe’s true nature to Orgon by getting Tartuffe to repeat his passionate revelations while Orgon is hiding in the room. Elmire’s plot succeeds, but it is too late because Orgon has already signed the house and properties over to Tartuffe. Although the ending is contrived, all does end happily and poetic justice is accomplished.  In a Parisian luxurious home of Orgon  mid 1600s Act 1, Scene 1 All said by Madame Pernelle  “Than dear Orante…”- Madame Pernelle believes Orante will condemn Damis and Dorine  “Parties are Towers of Babylon”  “Are nothing but inventions of the Devil”- Damis’ and Dorine’s thoughts of Tartuffe Act 4, Scene 1  “sacrifices your wrath to God above”  “God knows what people would think”  “leave vengeance to the Lord”  “but I am not commanded by the Bible”  “and thus obeyed the laws of Heaven  “Parties are Towers of Babylon, because The guests all babble on without a pause.” Act 1, Scene 1 by Madame Pernelle Compares parties to Towers of Babylon because of how the people react at a party  “And thus high Heaven’s justice was displayed: Betraying you, the rogue stood self- betrayed.”  Act 5, Scene 7 Act 1, Scene 1  “Seems so pure, so shy, so innocent and so demure.”  “ Their dear, dead mother did far better…”  “And practices precisely what he preaches”  “I’ll slap some sense into that stupid face.” Act 4, Scene 5  “I fear my words are all too frank and fare”  “In him and him alone will he confide; / He’s made him his confessor and his guide.”  line 17-18…. Act 1, Scene 1  Orgon tells Tartuffe about his secrets Act 1, Scene 1  “And you, his sister, seem so pure,/ So shy, so innocent and so demure.”  “I tell you that you’re blest to have Tartuffe Dwelling, as my son’s guest, beneath his roof…”  The beginning of the play- Damis and Dorine call Tartuffe a hypocrite while Madame Pernelle says that he is a fine man and would save their souls.  Orgon throws Damis out of the house and Tartuffe tells him that it was wrong in God’s eyes to throw someone out of the house and than Tartuffe later tries to throw the family out of their house.  The central theme is the exploration of religious hypocrisy in contrast to true Christian value  the theme leads to the satire  satirizes religion and being pious  parody of St. Augustine’s Authoritarian and misanthropic version of Christianity  Orgon is eager to believe in Tartuffe for a variety of reasons, but one of these is because the religion that Tartuffe is peddling is a version of Christianity that Moliere regards as insane  Orgon’s dependents are connected with his relish over original sin of human nature- He’s a “by the book” Christian  The target of the play’s satire is Tartuffe himself and that Tartuffe is obviously not an example of a religious hypocrite.  Orgon eagerly buys into Tartuffe’s mindlessly disciplinary rigor( based on the “extremist theory of Original Sin”)  The play pokes fun at the obsessive fanaticism and the blind gullibility of those who allow themselves to be victimized by the greedy and selfserving.  Tartuffe is considered a comedy and a satire work  comedy- contains basic and accepted patterns of comedic development  satire- takes a very specific human vice( religious hypocrisy) and censures it with the intent of improving humanity  the characters in the play always hide in order to obtain secretive information  Tartuffe first appears in Act 3, Scene 1, but the reader and audience have already been well- introduced to his character before his appearance  characters of Tartuffe are intended as types, rather than realistically drawn literary figures -Tartuffe: archetypal hypocrite -Orgon: archetypal gullible fool - may not always be “realistic”, but represents typical behavior of personality type that the character embodies