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Negotiating literary identity during the divide between the philosophes and the anti-philosophes (1745--1765

Posted on:2017-10-25Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of PittsburghCandidate:Ertunga, MertFull Text:PDF
GTID:1475390017462698Subject:Romance literature
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation centers on the negotiation of literary identity in the philosophes vs. anti-philosophes divide during the middle decades of the eighteenth century. During that time, the ideas of the philosophes were gaining ground in readership and popularity, and, as a consequence, their enemies were beginning to perceive their ideas as pernicious threats to the traditional values upon which the French monarchy was built. Voltaire, Denis Diderot, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau squared off against anti-philosophes such as Elie Catherine Freron, Charles Palissot, and the abbe Nicolas-Sylvestre Bergier in debates concerning literature, religion, and education. Philosophes questioned the principles on which the old order rested and relentlessly called on "reason" to challenge prejudices, while the anti-philosophes accused their adversaries of conspiring to subvert the French monarchy by rattling the foundations of the established religious practices and social peace.;The careers and writings of the playwright Michel-Jean Sedaine and the literary critic Elie Freron are examined in the first two chapters as a means of analyzing the challenges faced by up-and-coming writers in order to establish legitimacy as an author in an unstable literary arena. There were also what I term the "ecto-philosophes," writers who belonged neither to the philosophical camp nor to the anti-philosophical one. Their writings fell into oblivion for over two centuries as most scholarly studies have focused on the writings of the philosophes and their adversaries. The third and final chapter includes a detailed study of their contribution to the literary production during the conflict between the philosophes and the anti-philosophes.
Keywords/Search Tags:Philosophes, Literary
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