onebrownkwanza Wrote:
If you are looking for Enlightenment-era biting and somewhat snarky social criticism, maybe Johnathan Swift's "Gulliver's Travels", or his "A Modest Proposal". Other French sarcastic looks at society, "The Persian Letters" by Lord Montesquieu, or perhaps something by Moliere, or Racine. Voltaire also had Essays on England that are supposed to be pretty good, but I've only read excerpts of. "Young Werther" or "Faust" by Goethe, or some of Rousseau might be worthy, but then we begin to enter into Romanticism, the reaction to Voltaire's world of Reason.
Later stuff responding to Enlightenment reason stretches from Charles Dickens - don't ignore him, he is actually quite a wonderful writer, try "Great Expectations" or "Hard Times", to Shelley's "Frankenstein" to Bronte's "Wuthering Heights" (which I personally never liked much actually, but many others cannot seem to live without).
I wanted to read L'Ecole Des Femmes by Moliere but is it written in French or English? I mean, if it's in French like it says it is but there is a good translation I would absolutely love to read it, but I don't know. I don't know any French. I'll look for it today when I go to the book store.