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Representing Avarice In Late Renaissance France 1st Edition Patterson

  • SKU: BELL-5893720
Representing Avarice In Late Renaissance France 1st Edition Patterson
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Representing Avarice In Late Renaissance France 1st Edition Patterson instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.23 MB
Pages: 336
Author: Patterson, Jonathan
ISBN: 9780191787225, 9780198716518, 0191787221, 0198716516
Language: English
Year: 2015
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Representing Avarice In Late Renaissance France 1st Edition Patterson by Patterson, Jonathan 9780191787225, 9780198716518, 0191787221, 0198716516 instant download after payment.

Why did people talk so much about avarice in late Renaissance France, nearly a century before Moliere's famous comedy, L'Avare? As wars and economic crises ravaged France on the threshold of modernity, avarice was said to be flourishing as never before. Yet by the late sixteenth century, a number of French writers would argue that in some contexts, avaricious behaviour was not straightforwardly sinful or harmful. Considerations of social rank, gender, object pursued, time, and circumstance led some to question age-old beliefs. Traditionally reviled groups (rapacious usurers, greedy lawyers, miserly fathers, covetous women) might still exhibit unmistakable signs of avarice -- but perhaps not invariably, in an age of shifting social, economic and intellectual values. Across a large, diverse corpus of French texts, Jonathan Patterson shows how a range of flexible genres nourished by humanism tended to offset traditional condemnation of avarice and avares with innovative, mitigating perspectives, arising from subjective experience. In such writings, an avaricious disposition could be re-described as something less vicious, excusable, or even expedient. In this word history of avarice, close readings of well-known authors (Marguerite de Navarre, Ronsard, Montaigne), and of their lesser-known contemporaries are connected to broader socio-economic developments of the late French Renaissance (c.1540-1615). The final chapter situates key themes in relation to Moliere's L'Avare. As such, Representing Avarice in Late Renaissance France newly illuminates debates about avarice within broader cultural preoccupations surrounding gender, enrichment and status in early modern France.

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