Description

Book Synopsis
Explores the contradictions inherent in attempting to reconcile the logical and mystical aspects of divine right monarchy. This book analyzes texts devoted to definitions of sovereignty, presents Louis XIV's memoirs, and offers an analysis of diplomats and ambassadors as the mediators who preserved and transmitted the king's authority.

Trade Review

"How few truly interdisciplinary works we have, such as this one, that help bridge political and cultural parallels in history."--Renaissance Quarterly


"McClure . . . presents a tightly constructed, sophisticated argument about perceptions of French sovereignty in the 17th century. . . . Recommended."--Choice


"Sunspots and the Sun King is an excellent piece demonstrating thorough research and a novel engagement with primary sources that produces a provocative and appealing analysis of the crisis of mediation and sovereignty in the development of French absolutism under Louis XIV."--Sixteenth Century Journal


“McClure's treatment of mediation as a political and a literary concept is original, erudite, well researched, and convincing. McClure provides an excellent synthesis of theories of sovereignty, from which she distills critical questions that she uses to analyze the theater of the period. This is an impressive, informative, and extremely intelligent addition to the body of work on the relations between sociopolitical forces and literature in seventeenth-century France.”--Richard E. Goodkin, professor of French, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Sunspots and the Sun King Sovereignty and

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    A Hardback by Ellen Mcclure

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      View other formats and editions of Sunspots and the Sun King Sovereignty and by Ellen Mcclure

      Publisher: MO - University of Illinois Press
      Publication Date: 3/31/2006 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780252030567, 978-0252030567
      ISBN10: 0252030567

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Explores the contradictions inherent in attempting to reconcile the logical and mystical aspects of divine right monarchy. This book analyzes texts devoted to definitions of sovereignty, presents Louis XIV's memoirs, and offers an analysis of diplomats and ambassadors as the mediators who preserved and transmitted the king's authority.

      Trade Review

      "How few truly interdisciplinary works we have, such as this one, that help bridge political and cultural parallels in history."--Renaissance Quarterly


      "McClure . . . presents a tightly constructed, sophisticated argument about perceptions of French sovereignty in the 17th century. . . . Recommended."--Choice


      "Sunspots and the Sun King is an excellent piece demonstrating thorough research and a novel engagement with primary sources that produces a provocative and appealing analysis of the crisis of mediation and sovereignty in the development of French absolutism under Louis XIV."--Sixteenth Century Journal


      “McClure's treatment of mediation as a political and a literary concept is original, erudite, well researched, and convincing. McClure provides an excellent synthesis of theories of sovereignty, from which she distills critical questions that she uses to analyze the theater of the period. This is an impressive, informative, and extremely intelligent addition to the body of work on the relations between sociopolitical forces and literature in seventeenth-century France.”--Richard E. Goodkin, professor of French, University of Wisconsin-Madison

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