“Claire Goldstein wears her erudition lightly, effortlessly weaving together materials from an impressive array of sources and disciplines, while elegantly bringing out new interpretive layers in the material at hand.” —Hall BjØrnstad, Indiana University Bloomington <br /><br />“This is a book everyone will have to know and cite and, more importantly, that everyone will want to devour and discuss.” —Faith E. Beasley, Dartmouth College

Offering a new history of a formative cultural and political era through the cosmic phenomena that captured the public’s imagination

In the winters of 1664–65 and 1680–81, the French public was galvanized by two bright comets whose elliptical orbits could not be mapped with contemporary geometry and that thus seemed to appear in random and unpredictable locations. Bookending the period during which Louis XIV’s sun king mythology was created, these comets defied the heliocentric order to which French politics and culture aspired. As Claire Goldstein demonstrates, literary texts, cultural institutions, and architecture inspired by comets offer a different perspective on the relationship between sensory experience, ideology, and artistic form.

In the Sun King’s Cosmos: Comets and the CulturalImagination of Seventeenth-Century France presents an alternative view of a formative era in cultural and political history, when distinctly modern forms of power and control were established through a regime of the spectacular. Goldstein shows how comets allow us to see the seventeenth century in ways that complicate the narrative of a race toward rationalization, classicism, and modernity, indexing instead a messy period in which the spectacular was sometimes also inscrutable.

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Offering a new history of a formative cultural and political era through the cosmic phenomena that captured the public’s imagination. As Claire Goldstein demonstrates, literary texts, cultural institutions, and architecture inspired by comets offer a different perspective on the relationship between sensory experience, ideology, and artistic form.
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List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
I. Mediatic Comets
Chapter One. ‘Si confondus À la tour de Babel.’ Comets and the commercial press in late seventeenth-century France
II. ComÉtomanie 1664-65
Chapter Two. Dancing Comets
Chapter Three. Beyond the Eye of Absolutism: Claude Perrault’s Royal Observatory & the Intractable Challenge of Comets
III. ComÉtomanie 1680-81
Chapter Four. La ComÈte. Staging Comets as Commercial Circulation
Chapter Five. “La comÈte appartient À tout le dessein du livre et non le dessein du livre À la comÈte.” Genres of Disenchantment in Bayle’s PensÉes diverses sur la comÈte
Cometic Conclusions
Bibliography
Notes
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780810148123
Publisert
2025-02-28
Utgiver
Vendor
Northwestern University Press
Vekt
454 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
280

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Claire Goldstein is a professor of French at the University of California, Davis. She is the author of Vaux and Versailles: The Appropriations, Erasures, and Accidents That Made Modern France.