By David Cowling
ISBN-10: 1429456264
ISBN-13: 9781429456265
ISBN-10: 9042020067
ISBN-13: 9789042020061
ISBN-10: 9401203008
ISBN-13: 9789401203005
This selection of essays by means of ten prime British and French Renaissance experts explores, for the 1st time, differing conceptions of Europe in Renaissance France. 4 essays be aware of difficulties of definition in ideological, chronological, geographical and linguistic phrases; one other 3 deal with cultural trade and political collaboration (and, unavoidably, clash) among France and England on the time of the Wars of faith; the ultimate 3 contributions specialise in the development of a ecu id within the early smooth interval that defines itself unlike an important different, be it Islamic or ‘Atlantic’. This quantity may be of curiosity to students and scholars of French Renaissance literature and to these attracted to the prehistory of our modern perception of Europe. Contents David COWLING: advent Notes on participants 1. difficulties of definition: ideological, chronological, linguistic Jean BALSAMO: ‘Voici venir d’Europe tout l’honneur’: identité aristocratique et moral sense européenne au XVIe siècle Ian MORRISON: Rabelais: Christendom and Europe Margaret M. MCGOWAN: analyzing the prior: the Commentaries of Blaise de Vigenère and ‘l’enrichissement de nostre parler’ David TROTTER: ‘Si le français n’y peut aller’: Villers-Cotterêts and mixed-language records from the Pyrenees 2. Cultural trade and political collaboration among France and England on the time of the Wars of faith Yvonne BELLENGER: Sur l. a. Lepanthe de Du Bartas Marie-Madeleine FRAGONARD: Aubigné et l’Angleterre, après Elizabeth: esquisse de rencontres problématiques Yvonne ROBERTS: in the direction of a practical attractiveness of spiritual variety: the fight to shape a royalist consensus within the early poems of Jean-Antoine de Baïf three. Alterity and the development of a eu id Michael HEATH: silly or fearsome Franks? The meant Ottoman view of ecu Christians within the 16th century Françoise CHARPENTIER: Le périple des Pantagruéliens, ou l’ancien et le nouveau Frank LESTRINGANT: Le Livre des Contrariétés: l’Occident, le Turc et les autres
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Extra resources for Conceptions of Europe in Renaissance France : essays in honour of Keith Cameron
Sample text
4. 12 44 Conceptions of Europe à present viens de Turquie, où je fuz mené prisonnier lors qu’on alla à Metelin en la male heure. Et voluntiers vous racompteroys mes fortunes, qui sont plus merveilleuses que celles de Ulysses. (Pantagruel, ch. 9, p. 249) Coming at the end of a chapter in which he has answered Pantagruel’s questions in ten real and three imaginary languages, and thus revealed himself an instinctive showman, his promise suggests that his tale will be fanciful. When the story is eventually introduced, this expectation is reinforced.
56, p. 670). Mme Huchon notes in her edition (p. 1574) that this very sequence occurs in Janequin’s Bataille de Marignan. This link with European wars reminds us, quite subtly, that barbaric cruelty exists there also, and that the exultation of the victors prolongs the barbarity of battle — even if the victory being celebrated is that of François Ier himself. At the end of such a rapid survey, conclusions must be tentative. So far as Christendom is concerned, however, the texts do suggest strongly that it no longer represents anything very meaningful.
23. Chabod, pp. 31–33; Hay, pp. 23–24. 19 Chabod, p. 46. 18 Rabelais: Christendom and Europe 49 Europeans. Needless to add, this elite was essentially monolingual, in that the working language of the humanists was Latin. Clearly, then, ‘barbare’ has various connotations and, in examining Rabelais’s text, one cannot simply assume that all occurrences of ‘barbare’ refer to non-Europeans; sometimes, the reference seems rather to the ‘barbares’ of the European past. To start with the nonEuropeans, however, it is clear that, on occasion, Rabelais uses ‘barbare’ to convey remoteness.
Conceptions of Europe in Renaissance France : essays in honour of Keith Cameron by David Cowling
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