How Does Praise Of Folly Critique Renaissance Society?

2025-11-26 00:46:19 224
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4 Answers

Zane
Zane
2025-11-28 16:00:42
What fascinates me is how Erasmus weaponizes irony. Folly, the narrator, isn’t just mocking others—she implicates the reader too. Take the bit where she praises parents for believing their kids are geniuses despite evidence otherwise. Sound familiar? It’s a dig at universal human vanity. The book critiques Renaissance society’s obsession with classical learning by showing how scholars use Latin to sound smart without saying anything meaningful. Even kings aren’t spared; their wars and pageants get framed as childish games. It’s less about the Renaissance specifically and more about how power distorts rationality—timeless stuff.
Maxwell
Maxwell
2025-11-29 05:44:51
Erasmus's 'praise of Folly' is this brilliant, tongue-in-cheek roast of Renaissance society disguised as a speech by Folly herself. What I love is how it exposes the hypocrisy of everyone from scholars to clergy—like, Folly proudly takes credit for their absurdities! The way Erasmus mocks hollow scholastic debates, corrupt church leaders, and even vain royalty feels shockingly modern. It’s not just satire; it’s a mirror showing how wisdom and foolishness blur in a society obsessed with appearances.

Reading it, I kept thinking about how much it parallels today’s influencer culture—people chasing status while pretending to be virtuous. Erasmus targets human nature itself, really. The church’s indulgence scams? Nobles pretending to be enlightened? All get skewered with wit so sharp you’d miss the cuts if you blinked. Makes me wonder what he’d say about our TikTok debates and performative activism.
Uma
Uma
2025-12-01 01:44:34
Imagine Folly winking at you while listing society’s sins: monks selling salvation, lawyers complicating justice, philosophers contradicting each other endlessly. Erasmus doesn’t just attack institutions; he shows how people enable them through selfishness or laziness. The critique hits harder because it’s delivered by a character who celebrates nonsense—making you question whether 'serious' society is any better. It’s like a 16th-century meme exposing systemic absurdity.
Felix
Felix
2025-12-01 01:58:34
Ever had a friend who points out your flaws by joking about them? That’s 'Praise of Folly' for Renaissance Europe. Folly’s monologue feels like a stand-up routine targeting societal delusions—like theologians arguing about how many angels fit on a pinhead while ignoring actual suffering. Erasmus flips the script: what if being 'foolish' (rejecting pretension) is wiser than playing along? It’s subversive because it uses humor to ask, 'Why do we let these power structures define truth?' The book’s genius is making you laugh while realizing you’re part of the joke.
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