Littérature dissidente ou tributaire de la polémique réformée ?
Three well-known cases of sixteenth-century dissidence, Jacques Gruet, Noël Journet and Geoffroy Vallée, are examined for the resemblance their attitudes bear to reformed polemic in order to suggest that they represent less of a break with mainstream thinking at their time than has previously been c...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | fra |
Published: |
Groupe de Recherches Interdisciplinaires sur l'Histoire du Littéraire
2013-03-01
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Series: | Les Dossiers du GRIHL |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://journals.openedition.org/dossiersgrihl/5570 |
Summary: | Three well-known cases of sixteenth-century dissidence, Jacques Gruet, Noël Journet and Geoffroy Vallée, are examined for the resemblance their attitudes bear to reformed polemic in order to suggest that they represent less of a break with mainstream thinking at their time than has previously been claimed. This finding allows one to return to Carlo Ginzburg’s work and debates it has occasioned. Was Renaissance dissidence an independent movement or merely a side-effect of the Reformation? |
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ISSN: | 1958-9247 |