Secret Cabinets, Scribal Publication, and the Satyrique: François Maynard and Libertine Poetry in Public and Private Spaces
This article presents the poetic and epistolary corpus of François Maynard as a case study for understanding public and private spaces for reading and writing in the seventeenth century, with particular reference to notions of the cabinet as a physical, social, and literary space. It considers Mayna...
Main Author: | |
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Format: | Electronic Article |
Language: | English |
Check availability: | HBZ Gateway |
Journals Online & Print: | |
Fernleihe: | Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste |
Published: |
Sixteenth Century Journal Publishers, Inc.
[2020]
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In: |
The sixteenth century journal
Year: 2020, Volume: 51, Issue: 1, Pages: 55-78 |
RelBib Classification: | KBG France TJ Modern history |
Further subjects: | B
Intellectual life
B Public Sphere B 17th Century B 17th century French poetry B Libertines (French philosophers) B Maynard, Francois de, 1582?-1646 B France B History of books & reading B private sphere |
Summary: | This article presents the poetic and epistolary corpus of François Maynard as a case study for understanding public and private spaces for reading and writing in the seventeenth century, with particular reference to notions of the cabinet as a physical, social, and literary space. It considers Maynard's poems as personal gifts, published texts in collective anthologies, and texts circulated in manuscript form among a variety of readers. This study demonstrates the fluid boundaries that often existed between public and private literary spheres in the proliferation of poetry at this time, and argues that in Maynard's case, the division between public and private readership depended less upon the number of readers of a text or the ease with which a text could be obtained, and more upon the control that he was able to maintain over the text as a physical object. |
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ISSN: | 2326-0726 |
Contains: | Enthalten in: The sixteenth century journal
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