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The Politics of Print During the French Wars of Religion : Literature and History in an Age of Nothing Said Too Soon.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Faux Titre SeriesPublisher: Boston : BRILL, 2020Copyright date: ©2021Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (361 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789004440814
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: The Politics of Print During the French Wars of ReligionDDC classification:
  • 840.9003
LOC classification:
  • PQ239 .H335 2021
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Crisis -- 1 The Crisis of Representation -- 1.1 Too Much of a Good Thing -- 1.2 Nominalism -- 1.3 Scholasticism vs. Humanism -- 1.4 Ancients vs. Moderns -- 2 The Crisis of Interpretation -- 2.1 Imitation -- 2.2 A New Word -- 2.3 Destructive Debates -- 3 The Crisis of Authority -- 3.1 Authority and the Church -- 3.2 The Monarchy and Authority -- 3.3 History and Authority -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Fanatics, Martyrs, and the Rhetoric of Extremes -- 1 "Le bon &amp -- saint zele": Extreme Devotion to the Cause -- 2 Tyranny: The Extremes of Princely Rule -- 2.1 Atheism and Tyranny -- 3 The Rhetoric of Martyrdom -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 3 Print Matters -- 1 The Power of a Preface -- 2 Sacred Scripture: A Charged Textual Frame -- 2.1 Scripture on the Title Page -- 2.2 Judith and Holofernes: Exegesis, Politics, and History -- 2.3 Judith and Holofernes: Counterpoint -- 2.4 Weaving Together Poetry and Scripture -- 3 Poetic Interludes: Framing Texts with Verse -- 3.1 De l'estrange et subite mort de Henri de Valois -- 3.2 Pierre de l'Estoile's Registre-journal -- 3.3 Charles Pinselet's Le Martyre des deux freres -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 4 Recreating Authority in the Person(a) of the Author -- 1 Ronsard's Political Intervention and Personal Attacks -- 2 Teaching through Drama: Jean de La Taille and Saül le furieux -- 3 Experience Knows Best: Finding Authority in Foreignness -- 4 Prometheus and Prophet: Stealing the Truth for the Reader -- 5 Conclusion -- Chapter 5 The Mémoire of the Advocate David and the Discrediting of the Guises -- 1 The Treason of the Guises: The Mémoire and Papal Authority -- 1.1 The Gesta Stephani papæ -- 1.2 A Direct Response and a Call to Action -- 2 Lyon Looks South: An Alternative Emphasis for the Mémoire -- 2.1 The Sack of Antwerp of 1576.
3 Making It Stick: The Enduring Nature of the Mémoire as a Political Attack -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 6 The Truth at the Source -- 1 From Calumny to Exaltation: Seeking Unity and Truth in the Wisdom of the Past -- 1.1 The Language is the Message -- 1.2 Here Come the Franks -- 1.3 Better than Troy -- 2 Excessive and Repetitive Citation -- 3 Arming the Resistance: Differing Approaches Among Monarchomachs -- 3.1 Propagandistic and Reactionary -- 3.2 A Change in Rhetoric and a Change in Evidence -- 4 Obstacles to Hotman's Success -- Conclusion Finding a Way Out -- Bibliography -- Index.
Summary: In The Politics of Print During the French Wars of Religion, Gregory Haake examines how, in late sixteenth-century France, authors and publishers used the printed text to control the terms of public discourse and determine history, or at least their narrative of it.
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Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Crisis -- 1 The Crisis of Representation -- 1.1 Too Much of a Good Thing -- 1.2 Nominalism -- 1.3 Scholasticism vs. Humanism -- 1.4 Ancients vs. Moderns -- 2 The Crisis of Interpretation -- 2.1 Imitation -- 2.2 A New Word -- 2.3 Destructive Debates -- 3 The Crisis of Authority -- 3.1 Authority and the Church -- 3.2 The Monarchy and Authority -- 3.3 History and Authority -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Fanatics, Martyrs, and the Rhetoric of Extremes -- 1 "Le bon &amp -- saint zele": Extreme Devotion to the Cause -- 2 Tyranny: The Extremes of Princely Rule -- 2.1 Atheism and Tyranny -- 3 The Rhetoric of Martyrdom -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 3 Print Matters -- 1 The Power of a Preface -- 2 Sacred Scripture: A Charged Textual Frame -- 2.1 Scripture on the Title Page -- 2.2 Judith and Holofernes: Exegesis, Politics, and History -- 2.3 Judith and Holofernes: Counterpoint -- 2.4 Weaving Together Poetry and Scripture -- 3 Poetic Interludes: Framing Texts with Verse -- 3.1 De l'estrange et subite mort de Henri de Valois -- 3.2 Pierre de l'Estoile's Registre-journal -- 3.3 Charles Pinselet's Le Martyre des deux freres -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 4 Recreating Authority in the Person(a) of the Author -- 1 Ronsard's Political Intervention and Personal Attacks -- 2 Teaching through Drama: Jean de La Taille and Saül le furieux -- 3 Experience Knows Best: Finding Authority in Foreignness -- 4 Prometheus and Prophet: Stealing the Truth for the Reader -- 5 Conclusion -- Chapter 5 The Mémoire of the Advocate David and the Discrediting of the Guises -- 1 The Treason of the Guises: The Mémoire and Papal Authority -- 1.1 The Gesta Stephani papæ -- 1.2 A Direct Response and a Call to Action -- 2 Lyon Looks South: An Alternative Emphasis for the Mémoire -- 2.1 The Sack of Antwerp of 1576.

3 Making It Stick: The Enduring Nature of the Mémoire as a Political Attack -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 6 The Truth at the Source -- 1 From Calumny to Exaltation: Seeking Unity and Truth in the Wisdom of the Past -- 1.1 The Language is the Message -- 1.2 Here Come the Franks -- 1.3 Better than Troy -- 2 Excessive and Repetitive Citation -- 3 Arming the Resistance: Differing Approaches Among Monarchomachs -- 3.1 Propagandistic and Reactionary -- 3.2 A Change in Rhetoric and a Change in Evidence -- 4 Obstacles to Hotman's Success -- Conclusion Finding a Way Out -- Bibliography -- Index.

In The Politics of Print During the French Wars of Religion, Gregory Haake examines how, in late sixteenth-century France, authors and publishers used the printed text to control the terms of public discourse and determine history, or at least their narrative of it.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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