Human Comedy was a novel by Victor Hugo of France and his representative work. The story tells the various phenomena of French society in the 19th century, including political corruption, moral degeneration, social unrest, and so on. This novel is regarded as a classic of modern literature and has a profound influence on French and world literature.
Human Comedy was a novel by Victor Hugo of France. It was divided into three parts: Notre-Dame de Paris, Miserables, and Sea Labourers.
The human comedy usually referred to the author of Ode to Joy being French.
The author of Human Comedy was France Hugo.
The author of Comedy on Earth was Jacob Ernest of France.
The protagonist of Human Comedy was Charles Dickens.
Human comedy refers to novels that use ordinary people as the main characters to reflect social reality and human weaknesses, usually in a satirical and humorous style. The creation of this kind of novel can be traced back to ancient Greek comedies such as the Olive King, Aristophanes 'Bird, and Odessey. The creation of modern human comedies could be traced back to the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century in Europe. For example, the Tempest by William shakespeare, the Sambo by maupassant, and Pierre and maupassant. In the second half of the 20th century, the creation of human comedy gradually turned to the United States, such as Ernest's The Sun Also Rises, Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury, Macondo, etc. It was currently the most popular human comedy in the world. His works, such as The Old Man and the Sea, The Sun Also Rises, and A Farewell to Arms, were widely translated into many languages and received widespread praise and influence.