Montaigne's Unruly Brood: Textual Engendering and the Challenge to Paternal Authority
Perhaps as old as writing itself, the metaphor of the book as child has depicted textuality as an only son conceived to represent its father uniformly and to assure the integrity of his name. Richard L. Regosin demonstrates how Montaigne's Essais both departs from and challenges this convention...
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Zusammenfassung: | Perhaps as old as writing itself, the metaphor of the book as child
has depicted textuality as an only son conceived to represent its
father uniformly and to assure the integrity of his name. Richard
L. Regosin demonstrates how Montaigne's Essais both
departs from and challenges this conventional figure of textuality.
He argues that Montaigne's writing is best described as a corpus of
siblings with multiple faces and competing voices, a hybrid
textuality inclined both to truth and dissimulation, to
faithfulness and betrayal, to form and deformation. And he analyzes
how this unruly, mixed brood also discloses a sexuality and gender
dynamic in the Essais that is more conflicted than the
traditional metaphor of literary paternity allows. Regosin
challenges traditional critics by showing how the "logic" of a
faithful filial text is disrupted and how the writing self
displaces the author's desire for mastery and totalization. He
approaches the Essais from diverse critical and
theoretical perspectives that provide new ground for understanding
both Montaigne's complex textuality and the obtrusive reading that
it simultaneously invites and resists. His analysis is informed by
poststructuralist criticism, by reception theory, and by gender and
feminist studies, yet at the same time he treats the
Essais as a child of sixteenth-century Humanism and late
Renaissance France. Regosin also examines Montaigne's
self-proclaimed taste for Ovid and the role played by the seminal
texts of self-representation and aesthetic conception (Narcissus
and Pygmalion) and the myth of sexual metamorphosis (Iphis). This
title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1966. |
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DOI: | 10.2307/jj.2430760 |