Building Resemblance: Analogical Imagery in the Early French RenaissanceJohns Hopkins University Press, 1996 - 221 strán (strany) Resemblance, as featured in allegorical, analogical, and other figurative modes of expression, is often considered to be at the heart of discourse and understanding in the sixteenth century. Although this is undoubtedly true in Marsilio Ficino's Neoplatonism or Henry Cornelius Agrippa's occult philosophy, Michael Randall notes that difference also shows itself as an important element in many literary works of the early French Renaissance. In Building Resemblance, Randall examines the complex development of analogical imagery linking the imperfect human to the perfect divine in the poetry and prose of Jean Molinet and Jean Lemaire de Belges, two official historiographers working at the court of Burgundy, and in the novels of Fran& ccedil;ois Rabelais. In many of these texts, human beings understand their world not only through its resemblance to an invisible ideal but also through empirical analysis of contingent phenomena. Randall identifies a movement from Molinet's works featuring a conflicted relationship of resemblance and difference to Lemaire's, in which resemblance flourishes, and finally to Rabelais's Quart Livre, in which the principle of difference triumphs. All of these works, he argues, bear witness to the struggle between the paradigm of resemblance and that of difference, which would come to characterize the discourse of the modern era. In its use of noncanonical authors such as Molinet and Lemaire and in its contextualization of these authors in the works of other little-known writers, Building Resemblance offers a compelling new portrait of French Renaissance literature. |
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... explains that he will turn away from symbolic theology in order to have an experiential understanding of the divine through the affect . On the other hand , he needs to have recourse to language to talk about the experience . By moving ...
... explains to the Acteur that it was Jean de Meung who ordered the inscription made . Labeur Hystorien explains that Jean had been to French culture what Dante was to Italian culture . Noting that France and Flo- rence , Dante's town ...
... explains in few words everything this book has tried to explain in many . Montaigne , rejecting knowledge based on authority , turns to experience as a source of " connoissance , " which is , he reminds us , the most nat- ural of ...
Obsah
la Rose moralisé | 13 |
Molinets Reversed Analogies | 40 |
Etymologies tant ineptes | 58 |
Autorské práva | |
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Building Resemblance: Analogical Imagery in the Early French Renaissance Michael Randall Zobrazenie úryvkov - 1996 |