Less Rightly Said Less Rightly Said

Less Rightly Said

Scandals and Readers in Sixteenth-Century France

    • ¥9,400
    • ¥9,400

発行者による作品情報

Well-known scholars and poets living in sixteenth-century France, including Erasmus, Ronsard, Calvin, and Rabelais, promoted elite satire that "corrected vices" but "spared the person"—yet this period, torn apart by religious differences, also saw the rise of a much cruder, personal satire that aimed at converting readers to its ideological, religious, and, increasingly, political ideas. By focusing on popular pamphlets along with more canonical works, Less Rightly Said shows that the satirists did not simply renounce the moral ideal of elite, humanist scholarship but rather transmitted and manipulated that scholarship according to their ideological needs. Szabari identifies the emergence of a political genre that provides us with a more thorough understanding of the culture of printing and reading, of the political function of invectives, and of the general role of dissensus in early modern French society.

ジャンル
歴史
発売日
2009年
10月23日
言語
EN
英語
ページ数
304
ページ
発行者
Stanford University Press
販売元
Stanford University Press
サイズ
45.2
MB
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