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Devotional Poetry in France c.1570–1613

Devotional Poetry in France c.1570–1613

Devotional Poetry in France c.1570–1613

Cave
June 2009
Paperback
9780521113458
$46.99
USD
Paperback

    Dr Cave studies the relationship between the traditions of personal devotion in sixteenth-century France and the poetry which flourished at the end of the century and the beginning of the seventeenth. It was a poetry of intense personal commitment, preoccupied with penitence and confession, the vanity of life, the imminence of death, the meaning of the Incarnation and the Passion; often verging on mysticism and mingling of the sensual, the intellectual and the spiritual in a manner often thought typical of the baroque. It was part of a European movement, and there is much here to interest the student of the early seventeenth-century sensibility. A comparable book on English literature is Louis Martz's The Poetry of Meditation, but the lines of Dr Cave's enquiry are new. The book has a fourfold interest: to readers concerned with French literature; to those with particular interest in the traditions of devotion; to those concerned with comparative studies in the baroque period, and to students of rhetorical analysis.

    Product details

    June 2009
    Paperback
    9780521113458
    376 pages
    216 × 140 × 21 mm
    0.48kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Acknowledgements
    • Abbreviations
    • 1. Devotional traditions
    • 2. The devotional treatise: method and matter
    • 3. From devotion to poetry
    • 4. Poetry of sin, sickness and death. 1. The penitential prayer
    • 5. Poetry of sin, sickness and death. 2. Vanitas vanitatum and memento mori
    • 6. Poetry of the Incarnation and Redemption. 1. The devotional sonnet - Favre and La Ceppede
    • 7. Poetry of the Incarnation and Redemption. 2. The sentimental and the romanesque
    • Conclusion
    • Appendices 1–4
    • Bibliography
    • Chronological summary of primary sources
    • Index.