Jean Baptiste Racine - meaning and definition. What is Jean Baptiste Racine
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What (who) is Jean Baptiste Racine - definition

FRENCH DRAMATIST (1639–1699)
Jean Baptiste Racine; Jean-Baptiste Racine; Racinian; Racine
  • Jean Racine on the 1989 [[USSR]] commemorative stamp
  • Jean Racine

Jean-Baptiste         
MALE GIVEN NAME
Jean Baptiste
Jean-Baptiste is a male French name, originating with Saint John the Baptist, and sometimes shortened to Baptiste. The name may refer to any of the following:
Jean-Baptiste du Hamel         
FRENCH PHILOSOPHER
Jean-Baptiste Duhamel; Duhamel, Jean-Baptiste; Jean-Baptiste Du Hamel
Jean-Baptiste Du Hamel, Duhamel or du Hamel (11 June 1624 – 6 August 1706) was a French cleric and natural philosopher of the late seventeenth century, and the first secretary of the Academie Royale des Sciences. As its first secretary, he influenced the initial work of the Académie, but his legacy and influence on the Académie and the growth of science in France is mixed.
Jean-Baptiste Pérès         
FRENCH PHYSICIST
Jean-Baptiste Peres; Jean Baptiste Peres; Jean Baptiste Péres; Jean-Baptiste Péres; Jean Baptiste Pérès
Jean-Baptiste Pérès (1752–1840) was a French physicist best known for his 1827 pamphlet Grand Erratum, a polemical satire, translated into many European languages, that attempted "in the interest of conservative theology, to reduce to an absurdity the purely negative tendencies of the rationalistic criticism of the Scriptures then in vogue" (as Frederick W. Loetscher described what he called "the celebrated pamphlet" in The Princeton Theological Review 1906Frederick W.

Wikipedia

Jean Racine

Jean-Baptiste Racine ( rass-EEN, US also rə-SEEN) (French: [ʒɑ̃ batist ʁasin]; 22 December 1639 – 21 April 1699) was a French dramatist, one of the three great playwrights of 17th-century France, along with Molière and Corneille as well as an important literary figure in the Western tradition and world literature. Racine was primarily a tragedian, producing such "examples of neoclassical perfection" as Phèdre, Andromaque, and Athalie. He did write one comedy, Les Plaideurs, and a muted tragedy, Esther for the young.

Racine's plays displayed his mastery of the dodecasyllabic (12 syllable) French alexandrine. His writing is renowned for its elegance, purity, speed, and fury, and for what American poet Robert Lowell described as a "diamond-edge", and the "glory of its hard, electric rage". Racine's dramaturgy is marked by his psychological insight, the prevailing passion of his characters, and the nakedness of both plot and stage.