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Benedetta Craveri is a professor of French literature at the University of Tuscia, Viterbo, and the Istituto Universitario Suor Orsola Benincasa, Naples. She regularly contributes to The New York Review of Books and to the cultural pages of the Italian newspaper La Repubblica. Her books include Madame du Deffand and Her World, La Vie privée du Maréchal de Richelieu, and Amanti e regine: Il potere delle donne. She is married to a French diplomat. »
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The Age of Conversation (paperback)
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, between the reign of Louis XIII and the Revolution, the French nobility of the ancien regime turned their energies to developing the art of sociability, a refined code of manners, and an ideal of gallant, spirited conversation that became a model for social and intellectual life.
Benedetta Craveri's history of this leisured, worldly society begins in the 1620s with the celebrated Blue Room of the Marquise de Rambouillet, one of the first in a long series of women who resided over conversations among nobles, writers, prelates, and diplomats. The women Craveri profiles played a significant part in the development of new literary forms such as the novel and the maxim, the codification of language, taste, and behavior, and debates over religion, philosophy, and science. Some, like Madame de Lafayette and Madame de Stael, were gifted writers themselves. Some were involved in the major events of their time, like the Grande Mademoiselle and the Duchesse de Longueville during the Fronde rebellion. Later, the Marquise de Lambert, Madame de Tencin, and Julie de Lespinasse opened their salons to intellectuals such as Fontenelle, Montesquieu, d'Alembert, and Diderot, thus helping to spread the ideas of the Enlightenment.
In demonstrating the diversity of these women's accomplishments, Benedetta Craveri brings to life this brilliant, vanished culture that perfected the pleasure of living. In her pages, the world of La Rochefoucauld, Louis XIV, and Voltaire, of Jansenism, preciosity, Mlle de Scudery's literary portraits, and Mme de Sevigne's letters, appears in all its fascinating complexity.
Reviews
Benedetta Craveri has resurrected in tantalizing, inviting detail the supreme age of talk embodied in the great salons of Paris from the mid-17th to the late 18th centuries and the fascinating women at the center of those salons.
Thomas McGonigule, Los Angeles Times
...Shrewd portraits of intellectual society's leading ladies, or salonnières, and of the world they created...[Craveri's] book is essential for understanding the world of the salon and the reasons for its appeal to so many writers and statesmen.
Stephen Miller, The Wall Street Journal
Craveri argues that when, in the sixteen-twenties, the Marquise
de Rambouillet offered her home as a place for the French nobility to gather she was unwittingly
fermenting a revolution. The next century and a half constituted the golden age of conversation,
which allowed the aristocracy to establish a new order, based not on the strictures of church or
crown but on manners. Craveri's narrative paints a series of brilliant portraits of those (mostly
women) who presided over the new sphere.
The New Yorker
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Format: Paperback
Retail Price: $18.95
Price: $15.16 (20% off)
Aug 1, 2006
504 pages
ISBN: 1590172140 9781590172148
NYRB Collections
History
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