Results for 'Painting, French'

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  1.  7
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy, Meaning in the Arts.Peter A. French & Howard Wettstein (eds.) - 2003 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    This Volume illuminates the notion of meaning in the arts-in literature, painting, music, and dance. Specific topics include theory in the arts; interpretations of meaning; objectivity in meaning; and the consumer as a participant in art. Brings together articles from prominent philosophers and practitioners of the arts, which illuminate the notion of meaning in the arts. Addresses meaning in literature, painting, music, and dance. Explores the relationship between authorial intentions and the viewer's interpretation of meaning; the possibility of objective meaning; (...)
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  2.  27
    French sixteenth century genre paintings.Jean Adhémar - 1945 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 8 (1):191-195.
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  3.  31
    The painted enigma and French seventeenth-century art.Jennifer Montagu - 1968 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 31 (1):307-335.
  4. "French Painting in the Time of Jean de Berry": Millard Meiss. [REVIEW]George T. Noszlopy - 1968 - British Journal of Aesthetics 8 (4):420.
     
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  5.  8
    Masterpieces of Reality: French 17th Century Painting : a Loan Exhibition from Public and Private Collections in Britain and Ireland, the Leicestershire Museum and Art Gallery, New Walk, Leicester, 23 October 1985-2 February 1986.Christopher Wright - 1985
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  6.  5
    The Painting of the French Revolution. [REVIEW]Joachim Schumacher - 1939 - Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung 8 (1-2):253-254.
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  7. The Academy and French Painting in the Nineteenth CenturyAesthetics, an Introduction.Allan Shields, Albert Boime & William Charlton - 1971 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 30 (1):140.
  8.  5
    Abraham Bosse in Context: French Responses to Leonardo's Treatise on Painting in the Seventeenth Century.Thomas Frangenberg - 2012 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 75 (1):223-260.
  9.  44
    Representation and the Body of Power in French Academic Painting.Amy M. Schmitter - 2002 - Journal of the History of Ideas 63 (3):399-424.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 63.3 (2002) 399-424 [Access article in PDF] Representation and the Body of Power in French Academic Painting Amy M. Schmitter [Figures] Reputation of power, is Power... Hobbes, Leviathan, Bk. I, ch. x Introduction It seems natural, even obvious, to distinguish between representations and what they are representations of. A picture of a dog is no more a dog than the word "dog" (...)
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  10. Oscillations of the I. Academic Painting after the French Revolution (Louis Hersent, Léopold Robert, Paul Delaroche).Stephen Bann - 2003 - In Stefan Deines, Stephan Jaeger, Ansgar Nèunning & Justus Giessen (eds.), Historisierte Subjekte-- subjektivierte Historie: zur Verfügbarkeit und Unverfügbarkeit von Geschichte. Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 205-224.
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  11.  70
    Two Kinds of Historicism: Resurrection and Restoration in French Historical Painting.Stephen Bann - 2010 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 4 (2):154-171.
    The historicist approach is rarely challenged by art historians, who draw a clear distinction between art history and the present-centred pursuit of art criticism. The notion of the 'period eye' offers a relevant methodology. Bearing this in mind, I examine the nineteenth-century phase in the development of history painting, when artists started to take trouble over the accuracy of historical detail, instead of repeating conventions for portraying classical and biblical subjects. This created an unprecedented situation at the Paris Salon, where (...)
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  12.  17
    The Academy and French Painting in the Nineteenth Century. [REVIEW]John Adkins Richardson - 1972 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 6 (3):113.
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  13.  11
    Absorption and Theatricality: Painting and Beholder in the Age of Diderot.Michael Fried & Professor Michael Fried - 1980 - Univ of California Press.
    With this widely acclaimed work, Fried revised the way in which eighteenth-century French painting and criticism were viewed and understood. "A reinterpretation supported by immense learning and by a series of brilliantly perceptive readings of paintings and criticism alike.... An exhilarating book." John Barrell, "London Review of Books".
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  14.  7
    Morality and Social Class in Eighteenth-Century French Literature and Painting.Warren Roberts & Warren Everett Roberts - 1974 - University of Toronto Press.
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  15.  11
    The pre-figuration of the french revolution in David's paintings.Raphael Antoine Gimenez - 1992 - History of European Ideas 14 (1):137-140.
  16.  64
    The young Derrida and French philosophy, 1945-1968.Edward Baring - 2011 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In this powerful new study Edward Baring sheds fresh light on Jacques Derrida, one of the most influential yet controversial intellectuals of the twentieth century. Reading Derrida from a historical perspective and drawing on new archival sources, The Young Derrida and French Philosophy shows how Derrida's thought arose in the closely contested space of post-war French intellectual life, developing in response to Sartrian existentialism, religious philosophy and the structuralism that found its base at the École Normale Supe;rieure. In (...)
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  17.  32
    Painting with impasto: Metaphors, mirrors, and reflective regression in Montaigne's “of the education of children”.Virginia Worley - 2012 - Educational Theory 62 (3):343-370.
    Analyzing Montaigne's triptych painting, “Of the Education of Children,” reveals a series of ever-morphing, Dorian Gray–like canvases that depict metaphor mutations through which Montaigne defined education by distinguishing between schooling a child into a learned man and educating him into an able, active, and gentle person. Montaigne used metaphor and metaphor clusters to image key points in his educational philosophy, advanced his argument by intertwining, transmuting, and inverting metaphors, and thereby drew and vividly painted his philosophy of how to educate (...)
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  18.  33
    Compliant Rebellion: The Vanguard in American Art: Essay ReviewThe Painted WordSocial Realism: Art as a WeaponThe New York School: A Cultural ReckoningMarxism and ArtTopics in Recent American Art since 1945Good Old ModernFrench Painting 1774-1830: The Age of RevolutionAesthetics and the Theory of CriticismThe Academy and French Painting in the Nineteenth Century. [REVIEW]John Adkins Richardson, Tom Wolfe, David Shapiro, Dore Ashton, Berel Lang, Forrest Williams, Lawrence Alloway, Russell Lynes, Pierre Rosenberg, Frederick Cummings, Anoine Schnapper, Robert Rosenblum, Arnold Isenberg, Albert Boime, Renato Poggioli, John Jacobus, Sam Hunter & Barbara Rose - 1976 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 10 (3/4):225.
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  19.  18
    Painting outside the Lines: Patterns of Creativity in Modern Art.Matthew Ziff & David W. Galenson - 2004 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 38 (3):123.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Painting Outside the Lines: Patterns of Creativity in Modern ArtMatthew ZiffPainting Outside the Lines: Patterns of Creativity in Modern Art, by David W. Galenson. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001, 272 pp., $29.95.The relationship between the market value of paintings and the chronological point in an artist's working life when the paintings were produced is the driving mechanism for exploring creativity and innovation in David W. Galenson's book "Painting (...)
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  20.  4
    Aspects of "official" painting and philosophic art, 1789-1799.Diane Kelder - 1976 - New York: Garland.
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  21.  12
    To Destroy Painting.Louis Marin - 1995 - University of Chicago Press.
    The work of the eminent French cultural critic Louis Marin (1931-92) is becoming increasingly important to English-speaking scholars concerned with issues of representation. To Destroy Painting, first published in France in 1977, marks a milestone in Marin's thought about the aims of painting in Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A meditation on the work of Poussin and Caravaggio and on their milieux, the book explores a number of notions implied by theories of painting and offers insight into (...)
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  22.  49
    The Presentness of Painting: Adrian Stokes as Aesthetician.David Carrier - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 12 (4):753-768.
    Adrian Stokes , long admired by a small, highly distinguished, mostly English circle, was the natural successor to Pater and Ruskin. But though his place in cultural history is important, what is of particular interest now to art historians is his theory of the presentness of painting, a theory which offers a challenging critique of the practice of artwriting. From Vasari to the present, the most familiar rhetorical strategy of the art historian is the narrative of “the form, prophet-saviour-apostles,” in (...)
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  23.  14
    How to Paint a Roman Soldier: Early Modern Artists' Readings of Guillaume du Choul's Discours.Marta Cacho Casal - 2016 - History of European Ideas 42 (5):665-682.
    SUMMARYEarly modern artists who did not have access to Roman Antiquity or needed quick access to it could refer to prints after monuments such as those issued by Antoine Lafréry. But Du Choul's Discours sur la castrametation et discipline militaire des Romains [ … ] De la Religion des anciens Romains was also successful among artists, particularly painters. It was in vernacular language and widely available in French, Spanish and Italian; it was affordable and compact in format ; it (...)
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  24.  7
    The Aesthetic Theories of French Artists: From Realism to Surrealism.Charles Edward Gauss - 1966 - Johns Hopkins University Press.
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  25.  41
    Painter into Painting: On Courbet's "After Dinner at Ornans" and "Stonebreakers".Michael Fried - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 8 (4):619-649.
    In the pages that follow I looked closely at two major paintings by Gustave Courbet : the After Dinner at Ornans, perhaps begun in the small town of the title but certainly completed in Paris during the winter of 1848-49; and the Stonebreakers, painted wholly in Ornans just under a year later. The After Dinner and the Stonebreakers are the first in a series of large multifigure compositions--others are the Burial at Ornans and the Peasants of Flagey Returning from the (...)
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  26.  21
    Cezanne and Modernism: The Poetics of Painting.Joyce Medina - 1995 - State University of New York Press.
    This book explores how traditional relations among the arts have changed in our time, focusing on the radical transformation of Paul Cezanne.
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  27.  47
    Manet and the Object of Painting.Michel Foucault - 2009 - Tate. Edited by Matthew Barr & Nicolas Bourriaud.
    In this encounter between one of the twentieth century greatest philosophical minds and an artist fundamental to our understanding of the development of modern art, Michel Foucault explores Manet.s importance in the overthrow of traditional values in painting.
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  28.  15
    Becoming bamboo: Reassessing Su Shi's painting theory from Deleuze's angle.Kanghun Ahn - 2023 - Philosophical Forum 54 (3):161-184.
    This article aims to elucidate the Chinese literatus Su Shi's painting theory using French philosopher Gilles Deleuze's concepts of “capturing forces” and “becoming.” In the relevant scholarship, Su Shi's esthetic thought has been illustrated as going beyond the truthful representation of forms, thereby capturing the underlying vitality of the targeted objects, which paved the way for what came to be known as “literati painting.” This artistic approach has been thought to express the artist's lofty and virtuous personality through the (...)
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  29.  4
    This is not just a painting: an inquiry into art, domination, magic and the sacred.Bernard Lahire - 2019 - Medford, MA: Polity. Edited by Bernard Lahire.
    In 2008, the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon acquired a painting called The Flight into Egypt which was attributed to the French artist Nicolas Poussin. Thought to have been painted in 1657, the painting had gone missing for more than three centuries. Several versions were rediscovered in the 1980s and one was passed from hand to hand, from a family who had no idea of its value to gallery owners and eventually to the museum. A painting that had been (...)
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  30.  87
    The Death of Beauty: Goya's Etchings and Black Paintings through the Eyes of André Malraux.Derek Allan - 2016 - History of European Ideas 42 (7):965-980.
    Modern critics often regard Goya's etchings and black paintings as satirical observations on the social and political conditions of his times. In a study of Goya first published in 1950, which seldom receives the attention it merits, the French author and art theorist André Malraux contends that these works have a much deeper significance. The etchings and black paintings, Malraux argues, represent a fundamental challenge to the humanist artistic tradition that began with the Renaissance - a tradition founded on (...)
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  31.  16
    Phenomenology of Affectivity: form, color and image in Kandinsky’s abstract painting.Myriam Díaz Erbetta - 2020 - Alpha (Osorno) 51:9-23.
    Resumen: El presente artículo analiza el problema de la afectividad en la concepción de la Fenomenología de la vida del filósofo francés Michel Henry, quien la concibe como fundamento de la subjetividad y esencia de la manifestación. Henry realiza un análisis de la obra del pintor Vasily Kandinsky, y muestra cómo la pintura abstracta, no figurativa, logra expresar en los colores y formas aquello invisible que es la esencia de la pintura y que coincide a su vez con la Vida. (...)
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  32. Identity in physics: a historical, philosophical, and formal analysis.Steven French & Decio Krause - 2006 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Decio Krause.
    Steven French and Decio Krause examine the metaphysical foundations of quantum physics. They draw together historical, logical, and philosophical perspectives on the fundamental nature of quantum particles and offer new insights on a range of important issues. Focusing on the concepts of identity and individuality, the authors explore two alternative metaphysical views; according to one, quantum particles are no different from books, tables, and people in this respect; according to the other, they most certainly are. Each view comes with (...)
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  33. 129 Jean-franqois Lyotard.Experience Painting-Monory - 2007 - In Diarmuid Costello & Jonathan Vickery (eds.), Art: key contemporary thinkers. New York: Berg. pp. 129.
     
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  34. The Merleau-Ponty Aesthetics Reader: Philosophy and Painting.Galen A. Johnson (ed.) - 1993 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    PART INTRODUCTIONS TO MERLEAU- PONTY'S PHI LOSOPH Y OF PAI NTI NG Galen A. Johnson ...
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  35.  41
    Bergsonian Vitalism and the Landscape Paintings of Monet and Cézanne: Indivisible Consciousness and Endlessly Divisible Matter.Manfred Milz - 2011 - The European Legacy 16 (7):883-898.
    From around the year 1900, the ideal of the equivalence of art (form) and nature (animated matter) was challenged when two concurring principles—homogeneous duration and heterogeneous moments—started to manifest themselves in the discrete attempts of artists to integrate being into art. As creative approaches to the perception and representation of nature, these diametrically opposed configurations find expression in the writings of the French philosopher Henri Bergson, mainly between 1889 and 1907. The notion of living forms in permanent transition, informed (...)
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  36.  6
    The Brain-Eye: New Histories of Modern Painting.Eric Alliez - 2015 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    English-language translation of a major work by French philosopher Eric Alliez, in which he offers a new perspective on critical problems in modern aesthetics.
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  37.  4
    Bergson and the art of immanence: painting, photography, film.John Ó Maoilearca & Charlotte De Mille (eds.) - 2013 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    This collection of 16 essays brings 20th-century French philosopher Henri Bergson's work on immanence together with the latest ideas in art theory and the practice of immanent art as found in painting, photography and film. It places Bergson's work and influence in a wide historical context and applies a rigorous conceptual framework to contemporary art theory and practice.
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  38.  12
    The Great Prehistoric Art Swindle: André Breton and Palaeolithic Cave Painting.Douglas Smith - 2021 - Paragraph 44 (3):364-378.
    At Pech Merle in 1952, André Breton provoked a controversial incident by damaging a Palaeolithic wall painting that he suspected to be a fake. This episode provides an insight into the contested status of prehistoric sites in post-war France and the theoretical and ideological implications of their cultural mobilization. Such sites allowed for a disavowal of wartime trauma and supported the reaffirmation of French national identity and its civilizing mission by locating the birthplace of human culture on French (...)
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  39. 30,000 bc: Painting animality. Deleuze & Prehistoric Painting - 2006 - Angelaki 11 (2):137 – 152.
  40. Epistemological Disjunctivism and its Representational Commitments.Craig French - 2019 - In Casey Doyle, Joe Milburn & Duncan Pritchard (eds.), New Issues in Epistemological Disjunctivism. Routledge.
    Orthodox epistemological disjunctivism involves the idea that paradigm cases of visual perceptual knowledge are based on visual perceptual states which are propositional, and hence representational. Given this, the orthodox version of epistemological disjunctivism takes on controversial representational commitments in the philosophy of perception. Must epistemological disjunctivism involve these commitments? I don’t think so. Here I argue that we can take epistemological disjunctivism in a new direction and develop a version of the view free of these representational commitments. The basic idea (...)
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  41.  22
    Parallel structures: André Leroi-Gourhan, Claude Lévi-Strauss, and the making of French structural anthropology.Jacob Collins - 2021 - History of the Human Sciences 34 (3-4):307-335.
    This article reframes our understanding of French structural anthropology by considering the work of André Leroi-Gourhan alongside that of Claude Lévi-Strauss. These two anthropologists worked at opposite poles of the discipline, Lévi-Strauss studying cultural objects, like myths and kinship relations; Leroi-Gourhan looking at material artifacts, such as stone tools, bones, arrowheads, and cave paintings. In spite of their difference in focus, these thinkers shared a similar approach to the interpretation of their sources: Each individual object was meaningful only as (...)
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  42.  22
    The Figure in the Landscape: Poetry, Painting, and Gardening During the Eighteenth Century.John Dixon Hunt & J. D. Hunt - 1989 - Baltimore: JHU Press.
    Eighteenth-century England saw the rise of a "peculiarly English" art form—landscape gardening—and a corresponding change in attitudes toward the antural world. While the French, who lived under tyranny, had a tightly organized, restrictive gardens, the "free" English enjoyed gardens where they were at liberty to wander. John Dixon Hunt examines eighteenth-century letters, literary and critical works, biographies, paintings, prints, and drawings to trace the gradual movement from formal regularity toward a carefully calculated naturalness.
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  43.  30
    Valuations: Bi, Tri, and Tetra.Rohan French & David Ripley - 2019 - Studia Logica 107 (6):1313-1346.
    This paper considers some issues to do with valuational presentations of consequence relations, and the Galois connections between spaces of valuations and spaces of consequence relations. Some of what we present is known, and some even well-known; but much is new. The aim is a systematic overview of a range of results applicable to nonreflexive and nontransitive logics, as well as more familiar logics. We conclude by considering some connectives suggested by this approach.
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  44. Time and Chance.S. French - 2005 - Mind 114 (453):113-116.
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  45.  7
    The Attraction of the Contrary: Essays on the Literature of the French Enlightenment.Walter E. Rex - 2011 - Cambridge University Press.
    The essays in this 1987 volume are concerned with ideas of contrarity and other kinds of polar opposition in French literature of the eighteenth century. Originally these ideas were merely part of an impulse to undermine the establishment, but as the century progressed the desire to invert social values and question accepted norms merged with the main groundswell of the age to form part of the movement of Revolution. Professor Rex considers some of the major writers of the period: (...)
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  46.  6
    The Anti-Modernity of the French Philosopher Jean Brun.Christophe Réveillard - 2020 - Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences 62 (9):7-18.
    The article examines the French philosopher Jean Brun’s perception of the contemporary world, by analyzing the three pivotal components of Brun’s work, i.e., technology, language and sacredness. Modern people’s desperate attempts to escape their tragic destiny by trying to conceal the sacred lull human beings into an illusion of becoming creators of a technology-ruled space. In an attempt to escape the web of metaphysical anxiety associated with regrets, ontological Absence and separation, modern people hope to shelter behind the shield (...)
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  47.  6
    Esotericism against Capitalism?Aaron French - 2024 - Approaching Religion 14 (2):170-189.
    This article seeks a better understanding of how Rudolf Steiner envisioned his reform pedagogy as a site of spiritual learning (for example through art, seasonal festivals, ritual drama, etc.), but also as a specific site intended to resist the encroaching influence of capitalism, materialism, and corporatism spreading in Germany following the First World War. Steiner’s ideas about education did not emerge in a vacuum. He was inspired by and connected with other forms of communist, socialist, and Lebensreform movements in his (...)
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  48.  4
    The Brain-Eye: New Histories of Modern Painting.Robin Mackay (ed.) - 2015 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    English-language translation of a major work by French philosopher Eric Alliez, in which he offers a new perspective on critical problems in modern aesthetics.
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  49. By dw Masterson.Sport in Modern Painting - 1974 - In H. T. A. Whiting & D. W. Masterson (eds.), Readings in the Aesthetics of Sport. [Distributed by] Kimpton.
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  50.  8
    Citizens Without Sovereignty: Equality and Sociability in French Thought, 1670-1789 (review).Patrick Gerard Henry - 1996 - Philosophy and Literature 20 (1):279-282.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Citizens Without Sovereignty: Equality and Sociability in French Thought, 1670–1789Patrick HenryCitizens Without Sovereignty: Equality and Sociability in French Thought, 1670–1789, by Daniel Gordon; viii & 270 pp. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994, $39.50.Under examination here is the early modern period in France from Louis XIV to the French Revolution when kings ruled absolutely and citizens were without sovereignty. Discarding the traditional image of the Enlightenment (...)
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