Description
About the Author
Hall Bjornstad is associate professor of French at Indiana University, Bloomington, where he also directs the Renaissance Studies Program. He is the author of a monograph on Blaise Pascal, coeditor of Walter Benjamin's Hypothetical French Trauerspiel and Universal History and the Making of the Global, and the editor of Borrowed Feathers: Plagiarism and the Limits of Imitation in Early Modern Europe.
Reviews
"Eschewing the comfort of critical distance for the disarming rapture of intimacy, this book immerses us in the dream of absolutism. In this endlessly evocative tour of political theology at Versailles, Bjornstad guides us through a virtual hall of mirrors composed of the texts, images, and environments that reflected and magnified the glory of Louis XIV. Practicing a form of reading backlit by the premodern virtues of dignity and decorum, Bjornstad asks us to face the past in the originality of its most intense and disturbing commitments and he urges us to recognize our own captivation by a fantasy of power that remains with us today." * Julia Reinhard Lupton, author of 'Shakespeare Dwelling: Designs for the Theater of Life' *
"With grace and humor to match its inventiveness and deep learning, Bjornstad's new book turns scholarly consensus about the absolutist culture of the age of Louis XIV on its head. We have grown used to mining the art, literature, and philosophy of the period for critical awareness of absolutism's inevitable defeat. Bjornstad demonstrates that, on the contrary, absolutism was the self-defeating dream of elite culture as a whole, a fantasy of unequaled national as well as royal glory that planted the seeds for absolutism's overthrow less by exposing its irrationality than by nourishing collective delusions of grandeur that could never be realized." * Christopher Braider, University of Colorado Boulder *
"The Dream of Absolutism is a probing, innovative, scintillating, and daring anthropology of seventeenth-century French political aesthetics. It advocates for a specific way of reading texts, images, and archives in order to apprehend what monarchy, representation, and politics might have meant when understood on their own terms, stripped of all the ideological freight laid upon these concepts in the aftermath of the eighteenth century. By reading texts that are both at the center of seventeenth-century monarchical design and yet either neglected, forgotten, misread, or newly uncovered by scholars, Bjornstad's excavates a new seventeenth-century monarchism." * Juliette Cherbuliez, University of Minnesota *
"This book is not about Louis XIV nor even about one man's unquenchable thirst for power centuries ago. It is, rather, an analysis of a dream culture driven by its own logic and frighteningly relevant today. . . . This is a remarkable study of an important subject." * Choice *
"In showing us a dream that renders uninterpretable objects the objects of interpretation, in offering a language of absolutism at once private and participatory, Bjornstad gives his reader the equipment to notice something new about mere propaganda, regardless of the century in which one observes it. For this illuminating book impels its reader not to take such a dismissal at face value; it permits us to think anew about what mere propaganda contains within it." -- Andrea Gadberry * H-France Forum *
"In his erudite and exciting new book, Bjornstad urges those of us who study premodern France and its afterlives to take another look at absolutism. . . . Although The Dream of Absolutism is most explicitly a book about the past, the present lurks behind every gilded corner. Incisive and capacious, Bjornstad's book should be read widely, by specialists of early modern France, of course, but also by intellectual historians, political theorists, and students of contemporary politics." * L'Esprit Createur *
"Bjornstad's important study thus intersects in thought-provoking ways with eighteenth-century and modern accounts of civil society, sociability, and sovereignty, and opens potential new areas for inquiry. . . . It will become an important contribution to our understanding of French culture and politics at the intersection of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and beyond." * Eighteenth-Century Studies *
"A new, thoroughly refreshing look at the complex topic of absolutism."
* Sehepunkte (translated from German) *"The Dream of Absolutism brings the reader to a number of exciting 'aha' moments . . . This smart book will inform how I teach seventeenth-century literature and culture; I highly recommend it." * The French Review *
"Rather than focusing on Louis XIV per se, Bjornstad examines instead the dream or manifestation of absolutism that the king, together with his 'image-makers, the court, if not the whole nation, dreamt together collectively and that perhaps remains latent in the collective political imaginary today' . . . The visual element of Bjornstad's analysis not only makes for a fitting introduction to his work but also generates a most convincing, clear-cut, and illustrative discussion of the dream of absolutism, which functions concurrently as a reflection of modernity." * Seventeenth Century News *
"This book is of great importance for scholars and students invested in the reign of Louis XIV and early modern history and ideas, and it serves as a model of close textual analysis." * Renaissance Quarterly *
"Bjornstad's compelling book is not yet another study of Louis XIV; instead, via a careful examination of various representations and productions of absolutism, Bjornstad enquires into the sometimes irrational underpinnings of what he terms 'A dream propelled by its own logic' . . . This thoughtful and provocative book should be read by scholars of the period in literature, art history, and political theory." * French Studies *
Book Information
ISBN 9780226803838
Author Hall Bj?rnstad
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint University of Chicago Press
Publisher The University of Chicago Press