Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Difference, Cognition, and Causality: Maurice Scève’s Délie and Charles de Bovelles’s Ars Oppositorum

Banks, Kathryn

Difference, Cognition, and Causality: Maurice Scève’s Délie and Charles de Bovelles’s Ars Oppositorum Thumbnail


Authors



Abstract

This article juxtaposes two very different texts, Charles de Bovelles's Ars oppositorum (1511) and Maurice Scève's Délie (1544), examples of Latin prose philosophy and vernacular love lyric respectively. It is not a study of sources: it considers the literary text, like the Latin prose, as an instrument for thinking with. Furthermore, I suggest that contrasting conceptual possibilities arise from generic differences, so that the study of two divergent genres illuminates a variety of related conceptions of difference. I trace a shared interest in the respective roles of cognition and causality in establishing differences, but also a divergence concerning the value of difference, in particular for the human subject. Thus, in the Délie, I focus upon images of illuminating, looking, perceiving, and disintegrating. Both texts suggest that cognition is crucial to the establishment of differences, so that it even seems to usurp the function of natural causality. However, in the Délie the je suffers from difference — both difference within the self and difference from the divine — whereas in the Ars difference can be thought of as a violation but more often is perceived in Trinitarian terms, so that the human subject achieves a privileged sort of self-difference resembling that of the divine.

Citation

Banks, K. (2010). Difference, Cognition, and Causality: Maurice Scève’s Délie and Charles de Bovelles’s Ars Oppositorum. French Studies, 64(2), 139-149. https://doi.org/10.1093/fs/knq008

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 19, 2008
Online Publication Date Apr 1, 2010
Publication Date Apr 1, 2010
Deposit Date Feb 1, 2011
Publicly Available Date Mar 29, 2024
Journal French Studies
Print ISSN 0016-1128
Electronic ISSN 1468-2931
Publisher Oxford University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 64
Issue 2
Pages 139-149
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/fs/knq008

Files

Accepted Journal Article (400 Kb)
PDF

Copyright Statement
This is a pre-copy-editing author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in French Studies following peer review. The definitive publisher-authenticated version, Banks, Kathryn (2010) 'Difference, Cognition, and Causality: Maurice Scève’s 'Délie' and Charles de Bovelles’s 'Ars Oppositorum'.', French studies., 64(2): 139-149 is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1093/fs/knq008




You might also like



Downloadable Citations