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1797069201403281408
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OXFORD
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<br/><br/> List of tables<br/> List of illustrations<br/> Abbreviations<br/> I. The Discursive culture: reaction and interaction, text and context<br/> Mark Darlow <em>and</em> Caroline Warman (eds), Introduction<br/> Russell Goulbourne, Chain reactions in the eighteenth century: reading Racine, Marot and Horace<br/> Wendy Trowbridge, Anecdote in history: the case of Voltaire’s <em>Histoire de Charles XII</em><br/> Edward Nye, Contemporary reactions to Jean-Georges Noverre’s <em>ballets d’action</em><br/> Melissa Percival, Fragonard and pastiche: the case of the <em>Girl in Spanish costume</em> at Dulwich<br/> Caroline Warman, Chains of influence, chains of allusion: case studies of clandestine rhetoric in and around the <em>Encyclopédie</em><br/> Phoebe von Held, ‘Le grand oubli de Suzanne Simonin’: a premature case of amnesia in Diderot’s <em>La Religieuse</em><br/> Ann Lewis, Illustrations as reactions: three nineteenth-century readings of <em>La Nouvelle Héloïse</em><br/> Katherine Astbury, Reacting to the Revolution: the example of Marmontel and Mercier<br/> Mark Darlow, The role of the listener in the musical aesthetics of the Revolution<br/> II. Women’s studies<br/> Jan Clarke, Violence against actresses: evidence from Campardon and others<br/> Nadine Bérenguier, Lambert, Puisieux, Leprince de Beaumont, Epinay and the legacy of their educational manuals in the nineteenth century<br/> Mary Trouille, Challenging male violence and the double standard in the courts: the separation case of Dame D (Paris, 1788) <br/> III. Montesquieu<br/> Pierre Briant, Montesquieu et ses sources: Alexandre, l’empire perse, les Guèbres et l’irrigation (<em>De l’esprit des lois</em> X.13-14; XVIII.7)<br/> IV. Language and culture<br/> Avi S. Lifschitz, From the corruption of French to the cultural distinctiveness of German: the controversy over Prémontval’s <em>Préservatif</em> (1759) <br/> Jonathan Mallinson, Reconquering Peru: eighteenth-century translations of Graffigny’s <em>Lettres d’une Peruvienne</em><br/> Summaries<br/>
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first_indexed |
2024-03-06T22:20:57Z
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format |
Book
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id |
oxford-uuid:55094462-02f7-4b08-b6eb-fcbb74709c35
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institution |
University of Oxford
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language |
English
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last_indexed |
2024-03-06T22:20:57Z
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publishDate |
2017
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publisher |
Voltaire Foundation
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record_format |
dspace
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spelling |
oxford-uuid:55094462-02f7-4b08-b6eb-fcbb74709c352022-03-26T16:41:32ZEnlightenment and tradition; Women's studies; MontesquieuBookhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2f33uuid:55094462-02f7-4b08-b6eb-fcbb74709c35EnglishVoltaire FoundationVoltaire Foundation2017<br/><br/> List of tables<br/> List of illustrations<br/> Abbreviations<br/> I. The Discursive culture: reaction and interaction, text and context<br/> Mark Darlow <em>and</em> Caroline Warman (eds), Introduction<br/> Russell Goulbourne, Chain reactions in the eighteenth century: reading Racine, Marot and Horace<br/> Wendy Trowbridge, Anecdote in history: the case of Voltaire’s <em>Histoire de Charles XII</em><br/> Edward Nye, Contemporary reactions to Jean-Georges Noverre’s <em>ballets d’action</em><br/> Melissa Percival, Fragonard and pastiche: the case of the <em>Girl in Spanish costume</em> at Dulwich<br/> Caroline Warman, Chains of influence, chains of allusion: case studies of clandestine rhetoric in and around the <em>Encyclopédie</em><br/> Phoebe von Held, ‘Le grand oubli de Suzanne Simonin’: a premature case of amnesia in Diderot’s <em>La Religieuse</em><br/> Ann Lewis, Illustrations as reactions: three nineteenth-century readings of <em>La Nouvelle Héloïse</em><br/> Katherine Astbury, Reacting to the Revolution: the example of Marmontel and Mercier<br/> Mark Darlow, The role of the listener in the musical aesthetics of the Revolution<br/> II. Women’s studies<br/> Jan Clarke, Violence against actresses: evidence from Campardon and others<br/> Nadine Bérenguier, Lambert, Puisieux, Leprince de Beaumont, Epinay and the legacy of their educational manuals in the nineteenth century<br/> Mary Trouille, Challenging male violence and the double standard in the courts: the separation case of Dame D (Paris, 1788) <br/> III. Montesquieu<br/> Pierre Briant, Montesquieu et ses sources: Alexandre, l’empire perse, les Guèbres et l’irrigation (<em>De l’esprit des lois</em> X.13-14; XVIII.7)<br/> IV. Language and culture<br/> Avi S. Lifschitz, From the corruption of French to the cultural distinctiveness of German: the controversy over Prémontval’s <em>Préservatif</em> (1759) <br/> Jonathan Mallinson, Reconquering Peru: eighteenth-century translations of Graffigny’s <em>Lettres d’une Peruvienne</em><br/> Summaries<br/>
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spellingShingle |
Enlightenment and tradition; Women's studies; Montesquieu
|
title |
Enlightenment and tradition; Women's studies; Montesquieu
|
title_full |
Enlightenment and tradition; Women's studies; Montesquieu
|
title_fullStr |
Enlightenment and tradition; Women's studies; Montesquieu
|
title_full_unstemmed |
Enlightenment and tradition; Women's studies; Montesquieu
|
title_short |
Enlightenment and tradition; Women's studies; Montesquieu
|
title_sort |
enlightenment and tradition women s studies montesquieu
|