Description

Book Synopsis

This book’s primary purpose is to commemorate the 300th anniversary of Montesquieu’s Persian Letters, a seminal book in classical liberal thought. Persian Letters is a delightfully rich, sympathetic satire of commercial society’s promise and discontents, covering a wide range of issues and themes that shaped the direction of liberal modernity. It consists of a series of letters largely written by two Persian travelers to Paris, who allow modern readers to view Parisian life from the perspective of an outsider. The volume includes contributions from prominent scholars of Montesquieu’s and early career scholars who have recently unearthed new and exciting avenues for understanding this important hinge-figure in modern political thought.



Trade Review

Montesquieu’s Persian Letters is one of the gems of the Enlightenment, at once amusing and profound, accessible and sophisticated. This marvelous collection of essays not only does justice to the book’s complexities but also demonstrates that the issues and questions raised by Montesquieu’s story remain as relevant today as they were three centuries ago.

-- Dennis C. Rasmussen, Syracuse University

This volume is a most welcome and truly important contribution to serious interpretive reflection on what is perhaps the most understudied, and least well understood, great work of political philosophy. A true galaxy of contributors includes many of the most distinguished scholars of Montesquieu and of French Enlightenment political thought—each of whom has penned a gem of an essay. A true feast for the intellect!

-- Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas at Austin

This impressive volume -- the first dedicated to Montequieu's Persian Letters -- will not only serve as a benchmark for future scholarship on this important philosophical novel, but it will also inspire. It restores a very important part of Montesquieu's work to his overall political thought, and there is not one weak contribution in it.

-- Khalil Habib, Hillsdale College

Table of Contents

Foreword, Helena Rosenblatt

Acknowledgments

PART I: The Persian Letters in the History of Political Theory

Chapter 1. Philosophizing the Passions: The Seraglio as Laboratory in the Persian Letters Céline Spector

Chapter 2. Conflict in the Persian Letters, Pauline Kra

Chapter 3. Persian Letters in Time: Adhesive Past: Bright, Unstable Present: Divergent, Fragile Futures, Michael Mosher

PART II: The Persian Letters on Nature and Convention in Politics

Chapter 4. Pitfalls of Abstract Ideals: Usbek on the Law of Nations, Andrea Radasanu

Chapter 5. Faces of Monarchy in West and East and the Limits of Traditional Jurisprudence: Montesquieu in Dialogue with Bodin in the Persian Letters, Rebecca Kingston

Chapter 6. The Struggle for Recognition and the Economy of Esteem in and out of the Seraglio, Robert Sparling

PART III: The Persian Letters on Commercial Society

Chapter 7. The Plague of High Finance in Montesquieu’s Persian Letters, Emily Nacol and Constantine Christos Vassiliou

Chapter 8. The Political Economy of the Persian Letters; or, Self-Interest Wrongly Understood, in Three Lessons, Ryan Hanley

Chapter 9. Female Modesty and the Spirit of Commerce in Montesquieu’s Persian Letters, Lee Ward

Chapter 10. Rica in Paris: Sociability and Cosmopolitanism in the Persian Letters., Megan Gallagher

PART IV: The Persian Letters as a Critique of Modernity

Chapter 11. Who is the Hero of the Persian Letters, Jeffrey Church

Chapter 12. Hiding in Plain Sight: Montesquieu as a Friendly Influence in The Persian Letters, Vickie Sullivan

Chapter 13. What did Usbek—and the Reader—Know, and When Did He Know It?, John T. Scott

Chapter 14. The Book of Relations: Reflections from Montesquieu's Persian Letters, Stuart Warner

Chapter 15. The Unknown Chains of Enlightenment: The Irony of Philosophy or an Ironic Philosopher, Peter Lund

About the Contributors

The Spirit of Montesquieu’s Persian Letters

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    A Hardback by Constantine Christos Vassiliou, Jeffrey Church, Alin Fumurescu

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      View other formats and editions of The Spirit of Montesquieu’s Persian Letters by Constantine Christos Vassiliou

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 08/05/2023
      ISBN13: 9781666913279, 978-1666913279
      ISBN10: 1666913278

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book’s primary purpose is to commemorate the 300th anniversary of Montesquieu’s Persian Letters, a seminal book in classical liberal thought. Persian Letters is a delightfully rich, sympathetic satire of commercial society’s promise and discontents, covering a wide range of issues and themes that shaped the direction of liberal modernity. It consists of a series of letters largely written by two Persian travelers to Paris, who allow modern readers to view Parisian life from the perspective of an outsider. The volume includes contributions from prominent scholars of Montesquieu’s and early career scholars who have recently unearthed new and exciting avenues for understanding this important hinge-figure in modern political thought.



      Trade Review

      Montesquieu’s Persian Letters is one of the gems of the Enlightenment, at once amusing and profound, accessible and sophisticated. This marvelous collection of essays not only does justice to the book’s complexities but also demonstrates that the issues and questions raised by Montesquieu’s story remain as relevant today as they were three centuries ago.

      -- Dennis C. Rasmussen, Syracuse University

      This volume is a most welcome and truly important contribution to serious interpretive reflection on what is perhaps the most understudied, and least well understood, great work of political philosophy. A true galaxy of contributors includes many of the most distinguished scholars of Montesquieu and of French Enlightenment political thought—each of whom has penned a gem of an essay. A true feast for the intellect!

      -- Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas at Austin

      This impressive volume -- the first dedicated to Montequieu's Persian Letters -- will not only serve as a benchmark for future scholarship on this important philosophical novel, but it will also inspire. It restores a very important part of Montesquieu's work to his overall political thought, and there is not one weak contribution in it.

      -- Khalil Habib, Hillsdale College

      Table of Contents

      Foreword, Helena Rosenblatt

      Acknowledgments

      PART I: The Persian Letters in the History of Political Theory

      Chapter 1. Philosophizing the Passions: The Seraglio as Laboratory in the Persian Letters Céline Spector

      Chapter 2. Conflict in the Persian Letters, Pauline Kra

      Chapter 3. Persian Letters in Time: Adhesive Past: Bright, Unstable Present: Divergent, Fragile Futures, Michael Mosher

      PART II: The Persian Letters on Nature and Convention in Politics

      Chapter 4. Pitfalls of Abstract Ideals: Usbek on the Law of Nations, Andrea Radasanu

      Chapter 5. Faces of Monarchy in West and East and the Limits of Traditional Jurisprudence: Montesquieu in Dialogue with Bodin in the Persian Letters, Rebecca Kingston

      Chapter 6. The Struggle for Recognition and the Economy of Esteem in and out of the Seraglio, Robert Sparling

      PART III: The Persian Letters on Commercial Society

      Chapter 7. The Plague of High Finance in Montesquieu’s Persian Letters, Emily Nacol and Constantine Christos Vassiliou

      Chapter 8. The Political Economy of the Persian Letters; or, Self-Interest Wrongly Understood, in Three Lessons, Ryan Hanley

      Chapter 9. Female Modesty and the Spirit of Commerce in Montesquieu’s Persian Letters, Lee Ward

      Chapter 10. Rica in Paris: Sociability and Cosmopolitanism in the Persian Letters., Megan Gallagher

      PART IV: The Persian Letters as a Critique of Modernity

      Chapter 11. Who is the Hero of the Persian Letters, Jeffrey Church

      Chapter 12. Hiding in Plain Sight: Montesquieu as a Friendly Influence in The Persian Letters, Vickie Sullivan

      Chapter 13. What did Usbek—and the Reader—Know, and When Did He Know It?, John T. Scott

      Chapter 14. The Book of Relations: Reflections from Montesquieu's Persian Letters, Stuart Warner

      Chapter 15. The Unknown Chains of Enlightenment: The Irony of Philosophy or an Ironic Philosopher, Peter Lund

      About the Contributors

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