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         Moliere:     more books (100)
  1. The Miser and Other Plays: A New Selection (Penguin Classics) by Jean-Baptiste Moliere, 2000-09-01
  2. Oeuvres Completes 4 (French Edition) by Moliere, 1994-01-01
  3. The Countess of Escarbagnas by Molière, 2010-07-24
  4. Tartuffe and Other Plays by Jean-Baptiste Moliere, 2007-01-02
  5. Don Juan: and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics) by Molière, 2008-08-01
  6. Molière: A Theatrical Life by Virginia Scott, 2002-06-03
  7. The Life of Monsieur De Moliere by Mikhail Afanasevich Bulgakov, 1986-05
  8. Le Tartuffe (Petits Classiques) (French Edition) by Moliere, 2006-12
  9. Moliere Five Plays: "The School for Wives", "Tartuffe", "The Misanthrope", "The Miser", "The Hypochondriac" (World Classics) by Moliere, 1982-03-11
  10. Scapin and Don Juan: The Actor's Moliere - Volume 3 (Actor's Moliere, Vol 3) by Moliere , 2000-05-01
  11. The Imaginary Invalid by Moliere, 2010-01-29
  12. Dom Juan: Ou Le Festin De Pierre (Petits Classiques Larousse) (French Edition) by Moliere, 2006-12
  13. L'Avare(French Edition) by Molière, 2009-11-16
  14. Moliere: L'Avare (CRITICAL GUIDES TO FRENCH TEXTS) by G.J. Mallinson, 1993-12-31

21. Site Molière LOngchamp
Centre hospitalier public bruxellois du r©seau IRIS. Pr©sentation g©n©rale de l'institution et des services m©dicaux. Informations pratiques.
http://www.iris-hopitaux.be/Moliere/

iris structuur
iris structure
iris structuur
iris structure

22. PROJECT GUTENBERG OFFICIAL HOME SITE -- Listing By AUTHOR
moliere.
http://promo.net/cgi-promo/pg/cat.cgi?&label=ID&ftpsite=ftp://ibiblio.or

23. Molière. Le Malade Imaginaire. Introduction.
Molière. Le Malade imaginaire. 1673, 1674
http://www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/clicnet/litterature/classique/moliere/mi/mi

Le Malade imaginaire
PERSONNAGES ARGAN: malade imaginaire.
BELINE: seconde femme d'Argan.
MONSIEUR FLEURANT: apothicaire.
MONSIEUR BONNEFOI: notaire.
TOINETTE: servante.
PROLOGUE

AUTRE PROLOGUE

ACTE I : ARGAN.
: TOINETTE, ARGAN. : ANGELIQUE, TOINETTE, ARGAN. : ANGELIQUE, TOINETTE. : ARGAN, ANGELIQUE, TOINETTE. : BELINE, ANGELIQUE, TOINETTE, ARGAN. : LE NOTAIRE, BELINE, ARGAN. : ANGELIQUE, TOINETTE. PREMIER INTERMEDE ACTE II : TOINETTE, CLEANTE. : ARGAN, TOINETTE, CLEANTE. : ARGAN, ANGELIQUE, CLEANTE. : TOINETTE, CLEANTE, ANGELIQUE, ARGAN. : MONSIEUR DIAFOIRUS, THOMAS DIAFOIRUS, ARGAN, ANGELIQUE, CLEANTE, TOINETTE. : BELINE, ARGAN, TOINETTE, ANGELIQUE, MONSIEUR DIAFOIRUS, THOMAS DIAFOIRUS. : BELINE, ARGAN. : LOUISON, ARGAN. : BERALDE, ARGAN. DEUXIEME INTERMEDE ACTE III : BERALDE, ARGAN, TOINETTE. : BERALDE, TOINETTE. : ARGAN, BERALDE. : MONSIEUR PURGON, ARGAN, BERALDE, TOINETTE. : ARGAN, BERALDE. : TOINETTE, ARGAN, BERALDE. : TOINETTE, ARGAN, BERALDE. : TOINETTE, ARGAN, BERALDE. : BELINE, TOINETTE, ARGAN, BERALDE. : ANGELIQUE, ARGAN, TOINETTE, BERALDE.

24. PROJECT GUTENBERG OFFICIAL HOME SITE -- Listing By AUTHOR
moliere.
http://promo.net/cgi-promo/pg/cat.cgi?&label=ID&ftpsite=ftp://ibiblio.or

25. Moliere
(Jean Baptiste Poquelin) France 1622 1672 moliere was Poquelin's stage name, and the only name ever used for this writer.
http://faculty.southwest.tn.edu/bmcclure/lessons2/moliere.htm
Moliere (Jean Baptiste Poquelin) France 1622 - 1672 Moliere was Poquelin's stage name, and the only name ever used for this writer. Thus, Moliere is a pseudonym or pen name , which means a name other than his true name under which an author publishes his literary works Moliere's father, Jean Poquelin, was a successful craftsman. He was one of eight upholsterers who worked for the French king and royal family. Although Moliere had studied law and probably took a law degree in about 1641 at the age of 19, his father was a respectable and prosperous man who expected his son to take over his business and serve the king as he had. Poquelin and his wife, Marie Cresse, were to be disappointed. Moliere shocked his family by renouncing the business world and becoming an actor. According to legend, his mother's father had often taken him to theatrical performances, and this, perhaps, was when he learned to love the theater. However, actors in the 17th century were held in low esteem, classed with rascals and charlatans (tricksters/imposters), and were even denied Christian burial. For these reasons, Moliere's family regretted his decision. (Very probably the reason he acquired his pseudonym was to mask the relationship between himself and his family, thus sparing them the embarrassment of having an actor in their family.)

26. Great Books Index - Moliere
GREAT BOOKS INDEX. moliere (Jean Baptiste Poquelin) (16221673). AnIndex to Online Great Books in English Translation. Plays by moliere.
http://books.mirror.org/gb.moliere.html
GREAT BOOKS INDEX
Moliere (Jean Baptiste Poquelin) (16221673)
An Index to Online Great Books in English Translation AUTHORS/HOME TITLES GB CAFE ABOUT GB INDEX ... BOOK LINKS Plays by Moliere School for Wives Tartuffe Don Juan Miser The School for Wives
[Back to Top of Page] Tartuffe
[Back to Top of Page] Don Juan
[Back to Top of Page] The Miser
  • L'Avare (ABU) French text in an HTML edition.
[Back to Top of Page] Requests for Additional Material Please advise of other online editions you may discover. Have you written an online publication about Moliere? Please send the URL so it may be considered for a link. Comments and Corrections If you have comments or questions about the works listed on this page, you may enjoy discussing them at the Great Books Cafe If you find an error in this web page or wish to contact the editor, you can send e-mail to Ken Roberts at ken@mirror.org

27. ABU - AUTEUR Molière
Textes de Moli¨re disponibles sur le serveur de l'ABU.
http://abu.cnam.fr/BIB/auteurs/moliere.html
TEXTES AUTEURS SOMMAIRE
Molière
Liste des textes actuellement disponibles sur le serveur
L'Avare
Dom Juan, ou le festin de pierre

L'école des femmes (1662)

Les fourberies de Scapin
...
Tartuffe, ou l'imposteur
Recherche d'occurrences
Vous pouvez rechercher un mot dans le corpus de l'auteur. Rechercher tous les mots un de ces mots la phrase exacte réponses

28. Ecole Molière - Casablanca - Maroc
Pr©sentation g©n©rale de cet ©tablissement fran§ais. Casablanca.
http://www.ambafrance-ma.org/efmaroc/moliere/index.htm

29. Le Lycée Molière En Ligne
Ecole secondaire priv©e reconnue par la communaut© fran§aise de Belgique. Pr©sentation de l'©cole, des fili¨res propos©es et des activit©s organis©es en son sein
http://www.lycee-moliere.org

30. The Early Life Of Moliere
The Early Life of moliere. moliere was born in Paris, probably in January1622. In 1632 moliere lost his mother; his father married again in 1633.
http://www.2020site.org/moliere/earlylife.html
The Early Life of Moliere
Moliere was born in Paris, probably in January 1622. The baptismal certificate which is usually and almost with absolute certainty accepted as his is dated the 15th of January 1622, but it is not possible to infer that he was born on the day of his christening. The exact place of his birth is also disputed, but it seems tolerably certain that he saw the light in a house of the Rue St Honore. His father was Jean Poquelin, an upholsterer, who, in 1631, succeeded his own uncle as valet tapissier de chambre du roi . The family of Poquelin came from Beauvais, where for some centuries they had been prosperous tradesmen. The legend of their Scotch descent seems to have been finally disproved. The mother of Moliere was Marie Cresse; and on his father ‘s side he was connected with the family of Mazuel musicians attached to the court of France. In 1632 Moliere lost his mother; his father married again in 1633. The father possessed certain shops in the covered Halle de la Foire, Saint Germain des Prés, and biographers have imagined that Moliere might have received his first bent towards the stage from the spectacles offered to the holiday people at the fair. Of his early education little is known; but it is certain that his mother possessed a Bible and

31. Biography Of Moliere - French Dramatist
moliere, whose real name was Jean Baptiste Poquelin, composed 12 of the most durableand penetratingly satirical fulllength comedies of all time, some in
http://www.discoverfrance.net/France/Theatre/Moliere/moliere.shtml
Culture, history,
language, travel,
and more!

PLEASE VISIT OUR ART BOUTIQUE TO VIEW PRINTS BY FRENCH ARTISTS
MOLIERE - French Dramatist or M H I n the following 24 years, starting with The Precious Maidens Ridiculed (1659), which established him as the most popular comic playwright of the day, and ending with The Imaginary Invalid Other playwrights resented his continual experiments with comic forms (as in The School for Wives ) and with verse (as in Amphitryon I I T commedia dell'arte commedia themes and techniques, setting most of his plots in and around Paris and raising neoclassical French comedy to a plane of artistry and inventiveness never attained before or since. He applied the alexandrine , or rhymed hexameter line borrowed from contemporary tragedies, many of which he had staged to a relaxed dialogue that imitated conversational speech. He also created a gallery of incisive portraits: Tartuffe the religious hypocrite, and Orgon, his dupe; Jourdain the social climber; Don Juan the rebel and libertine; cuckolds such as Arnolphe, Dandin, and Amphitryon; Alceste the stony idealist; Harpagon the miser; Scapin the trickster; Argan the hypochondriac; Philaminte the pretentiously cultured lady; and many more. M The Jealous Husband The Flying Doctor Sganarelle The Rehearsal at Versailles (1663), and

32. Site-Molière (Introduction)
Biographie, oeuvres, commentaires et ressources.
http://www.site-moliere.com/index.html

33. Tartuffe
Some general information on the play.Category Arts Literature Drama Renaissance Molière Tartuffe......Tartuffe by moliere. History. Click on the picture to see an enlarged image.Read. Volume D. moliere’s Biographical Sketch, pages 304306. Tartuffe.
http://faculty.stcc.cc.tn.us/bmcclure/lessons2/tartuffe.htm
Tartuffe by Moliere History Tartuffe was first performed in a private production for King Louis XIV of France in 1664. The play pleased the king, but it was banned from public performance because of strong objections by officials of the Catholic church. Moliere protested, revised the play, and was permitted to produce it again in 1667 for the king. Again it was banned. After Moliere's third petition to the king, the ban was lifted in 1669, and the play was performed for the public. (To read a more detailed account of these early productions of Tartuffe , see history of play Type Characters Tartuffe is a 17th century comedy. It is designed to make the audience laugh. Do not expect ordinary life to be reproduced in this play! Do not expect realistic characters. Most of the characters are what are called type characters ; they are stock types found in many comedies . Sit coms today also use typical comical characters. Perhaps some of Moliere's will be recognizable. There is the hypocrite (Tartuffe), the clever maid exceptionally willing to state her personal opinions (Dorine), the blustering young man (Damis), the foolish but tyrannical father (Orgon), and the naive, timid young girl (Mariane). Social Conventions of the Period During the time this play is set, the father of a family had absolute power over his daughter's choice of marriage partner; the father's will might not be avoided. The chastity of the father's wife was of utmost importance. A son's economic status was totally dependent on his father's will. The father of the family was much like the king at that time; this is relevant to the end of the play.

34. Moliere
Retraining of the theatre and Entertainment sector. Che cos'è
http://www.moliere.it/
Moliere
Che cos'è Moliere

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35. Moliere, Script Directory @ Theatre With Anatoly
Key Terms moliere 16221673. DonJuan DJ XXI. Don Juan 2003 ShakespeareHamlet2001. Between Commedia and Neoclassicism. Don Juan. moliere.
http://script.vtheatre.net/moliere.html
Playscript Analysis of the Century * Dramatic Literature Forum : subscribe! var enabled = 'no'; Drama: Click to View or Add Text. TOPICS: drama comedy postmodern time ... space + past + present + future + death sex + resurrection + family generations wrong subjects advertising space : webmaster Summary:
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Fall 2002 THR215 Dramatic Literature : Bedford Compact Intro to Drama New way for you to respond - click on "htmlgear"!

36. Molière
A biography of the French dramatist and analysis of his works; includes a list of related links.
http://www.theatredatabase.com/17th_century/moliere_001.html
Home Ancient Theatre Medieval Theatre 16th Century ... Email Us T Corneille and Racine , but he died before either of them. His birth is obscure. At school he seems to have become acquainted with many Latin, Spanish, and Italian comedies. In his poverty he associated with low companions, and at one time he acted as valet in the household of the king. At about the age of twenty-two he became an actor and manager; but for a time he was wholly unsuccessful. One theatrical enterprise after another failed, and in 1645 he was imprisoned for debt. After being released, he gathered together a group of actors and left Paris for a tour of the provinces a tour which lasted about ten years. , and Docteur Amoureux (The Pretentious Young Ladies) and caricatured them with infinite skill. Even the blue-stockings and the gallants were obliged to laugh at themselves. was an immediate success, and encouraged its author to believe that contemporary life was his true field.

37. Moliere
moliere and The School for Wives Lecture Hall WRITERSWORD.COMJOLLYROGER.COM/PENPALSJOIN THE GREAT BOOKS CREW! PERSONALS.JOLLYROGER.COM MEET FINE
http://mobydicks.com/lecture/Molierehall/wwwboard.html
Moliere and The School for Wives
Lecture Hall
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Ahoy mate! Welcome to the new Moliere lecture hall!
The old Moliere lecture hall may be found at http://mobydicks.com/lecture/Molierehall/wwwboard23.html
Visit the Moliere Live Chat , and use the forum below to schedule a chat session.
Click on "New Topic" below to start a new topic.
Tell a friend about this page.
Forum List Go to Top New Topic ... Mark All Read Topics Author Date "du faux avec le vrai faire la difference" new Claire S The Miser.......how to.............. new Claire Forum List Go to Top New Topic Collapse Threads ... Mark All Read
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THE THREE BOOKS OF THE RENAISSANCE
SUMMER GREAT BOOKS CHALLENGE PERSONALS.JOLLYROGER.COM: MEET FINE SPIRITS ... Free Discussion Forum Ahoy mate! This is the new campfire forum! The old Moliere Lecture Hall http://mobydicks.com/lecture/Molierehall/wwwboard23.html

38. Moliere Lecture Hall Moliere The School For Wives The Critique
moliere Lecture Hall Western Canon University Lecture Halls and LiveRecitations. This lecture A Paper on moliere. John Marquart
http://mobydicks.com/lecture/Molierehall/wwwboard23.html
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Moliere Lecture Hall
Western Canon University Lecture Halls and Live Recitations
This lecture hall is devoted to all contemplations, musings, and queries concerning Moliere. We'd love to hear your suggestions regarding the best books, chapters, essays, and criticisms. Post an opinion, a question, a link to your favorite site, or a poem or short story inspired by the masterpieces of Moliere. We'd also like to invite you to sail on by the Moliere Live Recitation Chat , and feel free to use the message board below to schedule a live recitation chat. And the brave of heart shall certainly wish to sign their souls aboard The Jolly Roger Before we take to sea we walk on land,
Before we create we must understand.
The School for Wives The Critique of the School for Wives Tartuffe Post Message ] (If your message does not appear, hit the reload or refresh button.)

39. Language Learning Via The Web
(1996) World Wide Web Technology What's Hot and What's Not, Multimedia Monitor,XIV, 2, February 1996, 1519. Access at http//moliere.byu.edu/web.htm .
http://moliere.byu.edu/calico/calico96.html
Language Learning via the Web
Michael D. Bush
Brigham Young University
Paper presented at the 1996 Symposium of the
Computer Aided Language Instruction Consortium (CALICO)
Albuquerque, NM, 29 May 1996 Visit Multimedia and Digital Commentary Online
INTRODUCTION
Few, if any, technological innovations have enjoyed such a meteoric rise in the public consciousness as have the Internet and associated World Wide Web technologies. Currently doubling in size roughly every 50 days, the growth in the Web is nothing short of extraordinary. Within many quarters in education this attention is raising expectations that Net-based technology will be useful for delivering educationally sound materials to any student - anywhere. Indeed, materials are already starting to appear on the Web. The main question at this point seems to be "Are we ready to transition all or some of our lesson materials from current delivery systems to the Net?" If so, then there is a great need for work on the types of instructional interactions that can be supported on the Net as well as for investigation into the ways these can be implemented.
CURRENT STATUS
The success of the Web is inseparable from the relatively standard and widely available browser interfaces such as Mosaic , and Microsoft's Internet Explorer.

40. INTERNET MANIA
INTERNET MANIA. World Wide Web Technology What's Hot and What'sNot! Michael D. Bush, PhD. Brigham Young University Alpine Media
http://moliere.byu.edu/web.htm
INTERNET MANIA
World Wide Web Technology: What's Hot and What's Not!
Michael D. Bush, PhD
Brigham Young University
Alpine Media This article was published in the February 1996 issue of the industry newsletter, the Multimedia Monitor Monitor contact 1-301/424-3338 (Inside U.S. 1/800-777-5006) Fax 301/309-3847. EMAIL CLIENTSERVICES.PBI@PHILLIPS.COM Appears here by permission. Author's Note: For a long time now, I have prided myself on knowing where digital technology is and where it is going. For example, I have been thinking about applying various forms of technology to education since 1975, and I have actually been doing it for not much less time than that. Some time this past Spring I was feeling like I was really ignorant, having missed the fact that the Web was developing at an incredible rate, right under my nose. Luckily for my self-esteem, I read in the 5 June issue of Time magazine that in April 1994, Bill Gates had called an off-site meeting of his top staff to work out Microsoft's Internet strategy. Supposedly, he had confessed that the Internet "mania" had taken him by surprise. Despite the fact that he beat me by about a year, I no longer felt so "out of it." I take some consolation in the fact that Microsoft is working on improving its position as laggard in the race, having recently announced its strategy in its expansive 7 December Internet Strategy Workshop (Monitor 1/96 p1). The point is not necessarily being there first, but arriving with the right stuff - albeit not so late that the show is over by the time you make something happen. It will be interesting to see who winds up with the right stuff.

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