Gargantua and Pantagruel by Francois Rabelais
Theodoros Kafantaris
Δημοσιεύτηκε στις July 08, 2026
Introduction
Francois Rabelais was a monk, physician, and scholar who wrote the most exuberantly obscene, learned, and life-affirming books of the Renaissance. Gargantua and Pantagruel (1532-1564) follows the adventures of two giants—father and son—through a world of absurd wars, grotesque feasts, and philosophical inquiry. Rabelais's motto for his fictional Abbey of Theleme—"Do what thou wilt"—is not an invitation to anarchy but a radical faith in human virtue: a good person needs no external rules.
Laughter as Philosophy
Rabelais believed laughter was the proper response to life. His prose overflows with lists—body parts, foods, insults, books—that celebrate abundance. He coined words by the hundreds. He discussed theology through fart jokes. Mikhail Bakhtin recognized Rabelais as the supreme expression of the carnivalesque: the worldview that laughs at authority, embraces the body, and refuses to separate high culture from low.
Key Takeaways
- Laughter is a form of wisdom
- The body is not shameful but glorious
- Freedom requires virtue, not rules