Description

Book Synopsis
A collection of texts by a pioneering seventeenth-century French woman author.

Comprising texts by Madeleine de Scudéry, including many from her novel Clélie, this volume focuses on the story of Lucretia, the Roman matron whose rape and suicide led to the downfall of the Roman monarchy. Through her work, Scudéry seeks to contrast the enormous cultural contributions of women with their physical vulnerability and to propose an alternative to sexual violation, as envisioned on the Map of the Land of Tender that charts an imaginary land in the novel and outlines a path toward love. In Scudéry’s version of this tale, Lucrece and her beloved, Brutus, follow the path of tender friendship. Scudéry contradicts history’s characterization of Lucrece as craving glory in the form of fame. Indeed, contrary to ancient sources, Lucrece’s glory will be her decision to sacrifice herself secretly for her tender friend.


Trade Review
“In this erudite and insightful work, Sharon Nell assembles and expertly translates passages from Madeleine de Scudéry’s corpus, illuminating the foundational story of Lucretia, a Roman matron who turns her rape by Sextus Tarquinius into an act of supreme heroism through her suicide, which ultimately causes the downfall of the Roman monarchy. Scudéry’s version of this story poetically intertwines two of the main cultural preoccupations of mid-seventeenth-century France concerning women: female heroism and salon life, including the notion of tender friendship. Nell exposes the centrality of the Lucretia story which sparked debates about female glory and virtue originating in antiquity and continuing unabated through the seventeenth century, demonstrating that era’s intense preoccupation with the proper role of women.” -- Aurora Wolfgang, Professor of French, Michigan State University

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments

Illustrations

Abbreviations

Introduction
The Other Voice
About This Volume
Queen of Tender: The Life and Times of Madeleine de Scudéry
Scudéry’s Legacy and the Afterlife of the Texts in This Volume
Note on the Translation


Glory and Woman before Clélie: Lucrece and Cloelia in the Femmes Illustres (1642)
Lucrece to Colatin
Cloelia to Porsenna

The Language of Tender in Clélie, Part 1, Book 1 (1654)
Conversation on the Power of Inclination
Conversation on the Birth of Love
The Map of the Land of Tender

Lucrece and Brutus in Clélie: Glory in the Land of Tender
Collatin Takes His Comrades to Visit Lucrece at Collatia, from Clélie, Part 1, Book 3 (1654)
“Story of Lucius Junius Brutus,” from Clélie, Part 2, Book 1 (1655)
Lucrece’s Suicide and Brutus’s Speech, from Clélie, Part 2, Book 3 (1655)
Lucrece Appears to Brutus in a Dream, from Clélie, Part 3, Book 3 (1657)
Lucrece Appears to Clelie in a Dream, from Clélie, Part 5, Book 2 (1660)

Scudéry on Glory after Clélie
Discourse on Glory (1671)

Appendix A: Lucrece and Brutus: Sources from Livy to Augustine and Seventeenth-Century France

Appendix B: Glossary

Appendix C: List of Characters

Bibliography

Index

Lucrece and Brutus – Glory in the Land of Tender

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    A Paperback / softback by Madeleine De Scudéry, Sharon Diane Nell

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      View other formats and editions of Lucrece and Brutus – Glory in the Land of Tender by Madeleine De Scudéry

      Publisher: Iter Press
      Publication Date: 22/04/2022
      ISBN13: 9781649590220, 978-1649590220
      ISBN10: 1649590229

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A collection of texts by a pioneering seventeenth-century French woman author.

      Comprising texts by Madeleine de Scudéry, including many from her novel Clélie, this volume focuses on the story of Lucretia, the Roman matron whose rape and suicide led to the downfall of the Roman monarchy. Through her work, Scudéry seeks to contrast the enormous cultural contributions of women with their physical vulnerability and to propose an alternative to sexual violation, as envisioned on the Map of the Land of Tender that charts an imaginary land in the novel and outlines a path toward love. In Scudéry’s version of this tale, Lucrece and her beloved, Brutus, follow the path of tender friendship. Scudéry contradicts history’s characterization of Lucrece as craving glory in the form of fame. Indeed, contrary to ancient sources, Lucrece’s glory will be her decision to sacrifice herself secretly for her tender friend.


      Trade Review
      “In this erudite and insightful work, Sharon Nell assembles and expertly translates passages from Madeleine de Scudéry’s corpus, illuminating the foundational story of Lucretia, a Roman matron who turns her rape by Sextus Tarquinius into an act of supreme heroism through her suicide, which ultimately causes the downfall of the Roman monarchy. Scudéry’s version of this story poetically intertwines two of the main cultural preoccupations of mid-seventeenth-century France concerning women: female heroism and salon life, including the notion of tender friendship. Nell exposes the centrality of the Lucretia story which sparked debates about female glory and virtue originating in antiquity and continuing unabated through the seventeenth century, demonstrating that era’s intense preoccupation with the proper role of women.” -- Aurora Wolfgang, Professor of French, Michigan State University

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments

      Illustrations

      Abbreviations

      Introduction
      The Other Voice
      About This Volume
      Queen of Tender: The Life and Times of Madeleine de Scudéry
      Scudéry’s Legacy and the Afterlife of the Texts in This Volume
      Note on the Translation


      Glory and Woman before Clélie: Lucrece and Cloelia in the Femmes Illustres (1642)
      Lucrece to Colatin
      Cloelia to Porsenna

      The Language of Tender in Clélie, Part 1, Book 1 (1654)
      Conversation on the Power of Inclination
      Conversation on the Birth of Love
      The Map of the Land of Tender

      Lucrece and Brutus in Clélie: Glory in the Land of Tender
      Collatin Takes His Comrades to Visit Lucrece at Collatia, from Clélie, Part 1, Book 3 (1654)
      “Story of Lucius Junius Brutus,” from Clélie, Part 2, Book 1 (1655)
      Lucrece’s Suicide and Brutus’s Speech, from Clélie, Part 2, Book 3 (1655)
      Lucrece Appears to Brutus in a Dream, from Clélie, Part 3, Book 3 (1657)
      Lucrece Appears to Clelie in a Dream, from Clélie, Part 5, Book 2 (1660)

      Scudéry on Glory after Clélie
      Discourse on Glory (1671)

      Appendix A: Lucrece and Brutus: Sources from Livy to Augustine and Seventeenth-Century France

      Appendix B: Glossary

      Appendix C: List of Characters

      Bibliography

      Index

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