Gargantua and Pantagruel

Gargantua and Pantagruel THE FIRST BOOK-THE SECOND BOOK with Classic and Antique Illustrations

Gargantua and Pantagruel: THE FIRST BOOK-THE SECOND BOOK with classic and antique illustrationsThe Life of Gargantua and of Pantagruel is a pentalogy of novels written in the 16th century by François Rabelais, telling the adventures of two giants, Gargantua and his son Pantagruel. The work is written in an amusing, extravagant, and satirical vein; features much erudition, vulgarity, and wordplay; and is regularly compared with that of Shakespeare and James Joyce. Rabelais was a polyglot, and the work introduced "a great number of new and difficult words [...] into the French language".The work was stigmatised as obscene by the censors of the Collège de la Sorbonne, and, within a social climate of increasing religious oppression in a lead up to the French Wars of Religion, it was treated with suspicion, and contemporaries avoided mentioning it."Pantagruelism", a form of stoicism, developed and applied throughout, is (among other things) "a certain gayety of spirit confected in disdain for fortuitous things
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