1st Edition
Marguerite de Navarre's Shifting Gaze Perspectives on gender, class, and politics in the Heptaméron
Contents
Acknowledgments
List of abbreviations
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Between life and literature: the many faces of Marguerite de Navarre
Preliminary considerations: questions of gender, periodization, and theory
Genealogy, genes, and gender: the making of a princess
Serving god and the king: Marguerite’s religious and political development
Family matters: one body, one spirit, one faith
The gathering storm: l’affaire des placards and its aftermath
Marguerite’s many loves: weighing and balancing multiple loyalties
Tribulations and triumphs: Marguerite’s final years
Chapter 3 Gender and patriarchy: a many-sided view
Contexts and intertexts: rewriting and responding to male discourse
Female icons, exempla, and real women: alternative standpoints
Gendered violence and vice: making sense of "he said, she said"
Respectability and its double: the underside of male power and piety
The insides and outsides of patriarchy: beyond and beneath sexual difference and gender stereotypes
Re-viewing marriage and infidelity: coping with an "estate of long duration"
Chapter 4 Upstairs, downstairs: the dynamics of class and rank
A view from the top: looking down at the lower classes
Cruel masters and abuses of high rank
Excavating the underside of power and privilege: "les choses basses" as vehicles of revelation
Chapter 5 Power, politics, and modes of governance in the Heptaméron
The education of a Christian prince: positive models of governance and community
"When malice is joined with power": evil leaders, abuses of authority, and ethical dilemmas
Reading between the lines: political allegory and metonymy in the Heptaméron
Conclusion
Selected bibliography
Index
Biography
Elizabeth Chesney Zegura is Associate Professor (Emerita) of French and Italian at the University of Arizona, USA.
"With her thorough review of relevant scholarship, her deep understanding of the literary, historical, and political landscape of Renaissance France, and her fresh interpretive lens based on visual metaphors, Elizabeth Chesney Zegura has written an extraordinarily worthwile volume that expands our understanding of the Heptameron in fascinating new directions." -- Kathleen Loysen, Montclair State University






