Abstract

AbstractNumerous authors and critics in the seventeenth century compared Moliere with Terence, the Roman playwright. However, a close examination of the two authors shows that this comparison is difficult to sustain from the perspective of style or source material. There appears to be a much closer connection in the way that the two playwrights described their role as authors, their approach to compositional rules, and their deliberate use of controversy to solicit interest in their plays. By examining Terence's prologues and Moliere's published prefaces, this study argues that Moliere did indeed read and imitate Terence, but that Moliere's understanding of Terence's work avoided the narrow tangential reading imposed upon the Roman playwright by Moliere's contemporaries, using Terence instead as a guide to negotiating classical comedy's paradoxical imperative: to make extensive use of what has already been written in order to celebrate the primacy of present over past. What critics such as Boileau saw as ...

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