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Jean Racine

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Racine, Jean

 

Born Dec. 21, 1639, in La Ferté-Milon, in the county of Valois, now the department of Aisne; died Apr. 21, 1699, in Paris. French dramatist. Member of the Académie Française (1673).

Racine was the son of a civil servant. After leaving the Jan-senist abbey where he had been educated, he wrote odes and subsequently entered court circles. His early tragedy La Thébaïde, ou les frères ennemis was performed and published in 1664. His only comedy, Les Plaideurs (performed 1668, published 1669), satirizes the French judiciary.

The tragedy Andromache (performed 1667, published 1668) inaugurated a new era in French dramaturgy. A successor to P. Corneille, Racine wrote classical tragedies about amorous passion; these works emphasized moral problems and provided insight into human suffering.

Racine reveals with subtlety and great psychological depth the drama of individuals in conflict with themselves—torn between duty and passion, love and hatred. He depicts the inner life of women, the leading characters in his works, with great insight and sensitivity of language.

Racine’s tragedies, constructed naturally and simply, obey the inner logic of the protagonists’ feelings. Therefore, dialogue and the protagonists’ nature assume great importance, while external action is minimal and conforms easily to the three unities. At the same time, this strictly organized form is intensely permeated with the raging passions that blind man and, in spite of his will and reason, make him a criminal and tyrant or a victim of his own unrestrained nature. Racine’s ideal heroines, on the other hand, firmly resist blind passion and strong forces; they are ready to sacrifice themselves to remain true to their moral duty and retain their inner purity.

In Racine’s works, the state usually appears as a despotic element close to oriental tyranny; under its yoke all that is pure and virtuous perishes. The poet’s vivid political tragedy Bri-tannicus (performed 1669, published 1670) depicts the emergence of a tyrant. The aristocratic nature of absolute monarchy is revealed with particular clarity.

Racine’s ideal of self-abnegation expresses the poet’s belief that for the sake of morality and society, man must curb his personal strivings. This ideal is embodied most clearly in the tragedy Bérénice (performed 1670, published 1671), all of whose protagonists renounce their passions. But even here, emphasis is on the sufferings entailed by fulfilling the state’s demands.

Racine’s later tragedies are again built on the conflict between monarchical despotism and its victims: Bajazet (staged and published 1672), Mithridate (staged and published 1673), and Iphigénie en A ulide (staged 1674, published 1675).

In Phèdre (staged and published 1677), Racine forcefully presents the tragedy of a highly moral woman struggling with an overwhelming illicit passion. Thus, the poet’s greatest tragedy reflected a crisis in Racine’s ideal of self-abnegation and presaged the crisis of the old world order.

The authentic, strong passions depicted by Racine had always shocked court circles. However, Phèdre provoked particular indignation. Racine was accused of immorality, and the play’s first performances were failures. He stopped writing for the theater, a move that was also related to his return to Jansenism.

Racine returned to dramaturgy after a 12-year absence with the tragedy Esther (staged and published 1689), which he wrote for the students at the Saint-Cyr convent school. In this work, the poet urged religious tolerance.

A new genre of religiopolitical drama found a clear embodiment in Athalie (staged 1690, published 1691). The tragedy, based on a biblical theme, culminates in an armed popular rebellion against a despotic ruler. The theme of love is completely supplanted by topical social content. While anticipating the Enlightenment tragedies of the 18th century, Racine, even in his biblical dramas, remained true to the principles of his poetics: verisimilitude and economy of artistic means. His language as well is marked by a noble simplicity.

Racine’s last works were his Cantiques spirituels (1694) and Abrégé de l’histoire de Port-Royal (published 1742). A major poet of classicism, he had an immense influence on classical writers both in France and abroad. His work remained important during the French Revolution.

Most of Racine’s tragedies were translated into Russian in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The role of Phèdre became one of the main roles of E. S. Semenova. Racine’s tragedies were praised by A. S. Pushkin and A. I. Herzen. In 1921, in a new translation by V. Ia. Briusov, Phèdre was presented by the Moscow Kamernyi Teatr, with A. G. Koonen in the leading role.

WORKS

Oeuvres, vols. 1–5. Paris, 1931.
Oeuvres complètes. Preface by P. Clarac. Paris [1969].
Théâtre complet. Paris, 1963. [Text established, prefaced, and annotated by M. Rat.]
In Russian translation:
Soch., vols.1–2. Moscow-Leningrad, 1937.
Fedra. Translated by V. Briusov; foreword by G. Boiadzhiev. Moscow-Leningrad, 1940.
Sutiagi. Leningrad-Moscow, 1959.

REFERENCES

Mokul’skii, S. Rasin. Leningrad, 1940.
Grib, V. R. “Rasin.” In his book Izbr. raboty. Moscow, 1956.
Shafarenko, I. “Zh. Rasin.” In Pisateli Frantsii. Moscow, 1964.
Lemaître, J. Jean Racine. Paris [1908].
Vossler, K. J. Racine. Munich, 1926.
Mornet, D. J. Racine. Paris, 1944.
Bonzon, A. La Nouvelle Critique et Racine. Paris, 1970.
Eigeldinger, M. La Mythologie solaire dans l’oeuvre de Racine. Geneva, 1970.
Roubine, J. J. Lectures de Racine. Paris, [1971].
Turnell, M. J. Racine: Dramatist. London [1972]. (Contains bibliography.)
Pocock, G. Corneille and Racine: Problems of Tragic Form. London-New York, 1973. (Contains bibliography.)

I. L. FINKEL’SHTEIN

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive
The mystical sublimation of this sorrow gave birth to a masterpiece, her Cantique de Jean Racine for solo tenor, chorus, harp, and organ.
After inheriting a fortune in 1812, Girodet produced fewer paintings, shutting himself up in his house to write poems on aesthetics, illustrate books by Virgil and Jean Racine, and translate Greek and Roman authors.
Since first writing this Essai, Forestier has gone on to edit the new Pleiade edition of Racine's dramatic works, to write an overview of seventeenth-century dramatic theory (Passions tragiques et regles classiques, 2003) and a huge biography of Racine (Jean Racine, 2006).
DES les premieres lignes de sa Preface a Phedre, Jean Racine indique sa source d'inspiration: il a ecrit 'une tragedie dont le sujet est pris d'Euripide' et il a essaye 'd'enrichir la piece de tout ce qui m'a paru le plus eclatant dans la sienne' (817).
The real axe, stained with blood, with which the assassin kills his victims is a baleful object; but the image of the axes is somehow beneficial." If nothing else, that would explain the bare, classical purity of Bresson's scripts, a language one can find in authors as radically different as Jean Racine and Samuel Beckett.
Bobsledders Jean Racine and Jennifer Davidson hear whoops and cheers, proving that they are, in their words, "the fastest chicks on ice." And Apolo Anton Ohno sees himself stepping onto the podium after winning his speed-skating events.
Se preconizaba, por el contrario, la norma literaria aristotelica interpretada por el primer preceptista frances del siglo XVII, Boileau, amigo de Jean Racine (Nanez 1985: 49-50).
production of the play in one act by Jean Racine, in a new version by Robert David MacDonald.
The legend of Alexander inspired writers down through the ages, from Plutarch (who wrote of him in Parallel Lives) and Ferdowsi (in the Shah-nameh) to John Lyly, Pedro Calderon de la Barca, Jean Racine, Jakob Wassermann, and many others.
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