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Module 6 - Part
1: Overview
Other parts of this module include:
Index |
Part 2: Explorations and Exercises
| Part
3: Texts and Contexts |
Part 4: Web Resources
The Emergence of the Personal in the European Renaissance
Focus on Montaigne
"Characters . . . are frequently presented in acts
of thought, fantasy, planning, doubt, and internal debate. Deliberating with others and themselves about what to do seems
at least as important to these characters as putting their
plans into action." (p. 2465)
"The first writer to ask 'Who am I?' and pursue
the question with extraordinary honesty and rigor, Montaigne
presents himself, in his essays, as an explorer of existential
dilemmas and of cultural and psychological identity crises." (p.
2632)
Montaigne
Link
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The personal essay
Human beings have always reflected on their experiences
and tried to find meaning in them. Yet there was something
new in the intensity with which Renaissance thinkers watched
themselves going through this process. In the Letter to
Dionisio da Borgo San Sepolcro in which Petrarch, the
harbinger of the Renaissance, describes his ascent of Mount
Ventoux, the author follows a Christian pattern and, apparently,
interprets his climb retrospectively, refining the letter
some years after the event took place. The modern essay, however,
the invention of Montaigne, captures the mind in action.
To assay is to weigh, to examine, to try. In his
essays, Montaigne proceeds by trying out ideas. This tentative
approach toward understanding the world bespeaks skepticism
about received truth. When he began these literary trials,
Montaigne, good humanist that he was, relied heavily on his
reading of the ancients. Thumb through the selections in the
anthology and you will see quotations from Virgil, Ovid, Horace,
Propertius, Juvenal, and other classical authors. As he wrote
his essays, however, over the course of several decades, Montaigne
began to rely more on his own authority. Although his essays
are hardly autobiographical, they reveal a great deal about
his own experience as he draws more and more on events he
witnessed and persons with whom he conversed to shape his
train of thought.
Image of a conquistador
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The historical moment: Reasons for doubt
Surveys of the Renaissance brightly note the influx of
new ideas that opened windows onto new vistas: the Reformation
expanded Christian thinking; the discovery of the Americas
broadened human horizons. Yet those windows, as it were,
had
to be cut into an existing wall, causing dislocation and
pain. Montaigne's darker reflections often respond to the cruelty
associated with cataclysmic change. The religious wars in
France and the conquest of the New World were horrific events
to those who lived through them. Although he remained a Catholic,
members of Montaigne's family, including his brother and
sister, became Protestants; the city of which he was twice
mayor, Bordeaux, was located in the center of southwestern
France and therefore surrounded by pockets of Huguenot strength.
Both "Of Cannibals" and "Of Coaches" link
the brutality that was visited on the French Protestants with
the treatment of the native populations of Mexico and Peru.
Montaigne pondered the clash of different cultures both at
home and abroad. Even if one subscribes wholeheartedly to
a system of belief, it is hard to justify torturing others
who do not subscribe to it. And if one is not so sure about
what one believesif one is skeptical about any single
orthodoxythe mind of the observer will shuttle back
and forth between poles, trying to find a place where truth
resides. Montaigne's essays reveal the routes tried
and returned from in this inner traffic.
An eyewitness account of the Saint Bartholomew's Day
Massacre by François Dubois, from the Musée Cantonal
des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Link
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The emergence of personality
Through his willingness to judge for himself, Montaigne
speaks to us as an idiosyncratic personality: as he says
in
his preface, "I am myself the matter of my book"
(p. 2636). This sense of self reflects a popular understanding
that every human being has unique features. As fascination
with the oddity of individuals grew, the old humoral psychology
began to seem inadequate. Greek science and medicine had taught
that there were four elements (earth, air, fire, and water)
and four complementary humors (black bile and blood, yellow
bile and phlegm). One's attitude toward the world mirrored
the preponderant humor.
These notions still attracted many Renaissance artists;
Shakespeare's contemporary, Ben Jonson, for example, masterfully
creates Humors Characters, whose actions could be diagnosed
as expressions of excesses of, say, black bile (melancholic)
or blood (sanguinic). "Character" is a term with
a long history in Europe. "Personality," however,
is something different. According to the Oxford EnglishDictionary, the word "personality" can
be traced to fifteenth-century French. In his essays, writing
in French, Montaigne explores this new conception of personal
behavior, which is understood to be the result of individual
quirkiness rather than physiological imbalance. In Shakespeare's
plays, a character like Polonius, who represents old-fashioned
thinking, may think that he can diagnose the behavior of a
complex figure like Hamlet by matching it to a preexisting
pattern (love melancholy). A hero like Hamlet, however, resists
easy labels; his mentality, or his personality, defies pat
analysis.
Portrait of Montaigne
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The portrait in the Renaissance
The visual equivalent of the simultaneous examination
of the self and of the world that Montaigne conducts in
his essays
is the portrait. His note to the reader makes this explicit:
If I had written to seek the world's favor, I should
have bedecked myself better, and should present myself
in
a studied posture. I want to be seen here in my simple,
natural, ordinary fashion, without straining or artifice,
for it is myself that I portray. (p. 2636)
Writing in 1580, Montaigne knowingly links the self-awareness
projected in his essays to that of the typical portrait subject
of the era. In his magisterial study of this subject, John
Pope-Hennessy traces the evolution of a style of painting
that began in Florence in the 1420s with the works of Masaccio.
Artists had begun to include small likenesses of donors who
commissioned religious works of art in the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries. During the Renaissance, this urge to commemorate
the self became the reason for the painting, not an afterthought
to a larger composition.
. . . portraiture, like other forms of art, is an expression
of conviction, and in the Renaissance it reflects the
reawakening
interest in human motives and the human character, the
resurgent recognition of those factors which make human
beings individual,
that lay at the center of Renaisssance life. It is sometimes
said that the Renaissance vision of man's self-sufficient
nature marks the beginning of the modern world. Undoubtedly
it marks the beginning of the modern portrait. - The
Portrait in the Renaissance, 1966, p. 3
Writers and painters experimented with ways to represent
inner life in words and pictures. Looking much like the exemplary
figure who he celebrates in the Bookof the Courtier,
Castiglione sat for a portrait by his friend, Raphael.
The
thoughtful eyes of the writer in this great painting seek
out the viewer, creating a sense of intimacy and trust,
even
as the elegant hat and complicated sleeves bear witness
to a flair for self-presentation that almost belies the
clarity
of the subject's gaze. Thus, even an image that mirrors
the surface can be an essay in itself, faithfully recording
the features and the posture of the sitter while simultaneously
including details that argue against any simple interpretation
of the portrait subject.
Raphael's portrait of Baldessar Castiglione
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Humanism, imitation, and innovation
My tables,meet it is I set it down That one may
smile, and smile, and be a villain (Hamlet,
1.5.10708)
Renaissance humanists carried writing tablets so that
they could make a record of aphorisms and quotations encountered
in casual conversation or in the library. These tablets,
or
tables, also were handy places to jot down fresh thoughts
and personal observations. Shakespeare's Hamlet resembles
Montaigne as he cultivates the turns of his own mind responding
to the political, cultural, and social peculiarities that
surround him. Before Hamlet begins, Hamlet, like
the young Montaigne or Castiglione, seems "the glass
of fashion and the mould of form" (3.1.147). Like them,
he draws on his copious knowledge of the past (as in the scene
where he remembers the Player King's speaking of Aeneas's
tale to Dido). Gradually, however, Hamlet must erase his
memories
to plunge deeper into the lived reality of Elsinore if
he is to sort out the truth of his experience.
A drawing of Hamlet reading, by Eugène Delacroix
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Holding the mirror up to life
More than any other of Shakespeare's major figures,
Hamlet is revealed to us through his soliloquies, in which
he probes his own motives and fears, trying to understand
why he does not measure up to his own conception of his
duties,
as traditional notions of honor would have construed them.
Viewing oneself in mirrors (glasses) while measuring oneself
against preexisting models (moulds) allow the self-examiner
to search out the signs of a complex life unlike any other.
The fictional Hamlet and the actual Montaigne explore the
unexpected turns of their own minds in a language that
constantly
surprises us as it veers without apparent preparation from
one point to another. In TheQuestion of Hamlet (1959),
Harry Levin links the innovative quality of Shakespeare's
plays, in which the characters seem spontaneously to be
creating
their beings before our eyes, to the influence of Montaigne:
the soliloquies are like the Essays in balancing
arguments with counter-arguments, in pursuing wayward ideas
and unmasking stubborn illusions, in scholarly illustrations
and homely afterthoughts which range from the soul of Nero
to John-a-dreams. (p. 72)
Although Western audiences associate such intellectual
vivacity especially with the European Renaissance, it may
of course
be seen in the works of artists in other modes, periods,
and places, too.
Parmigianino, Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror
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Renaissance music and the cult of personality
Like the visual artists of the Renaissance, musicians
of the time both cultivated old traditions as the "mould
of form" and experimented with new harmonic and melodic
materials to express the complicated interior lives of
individuals.
Instead of having church choirs sing a single line of music
in unison, composers like Palestrina introduced a new variety
into sacred music by writing for polyphonic voices. New,
more
flexible instruments supported the exploration of secular
voices that sang of the self and the idiosyncratic personality.
Monteverdi invented opera at about the same time that Shakespeare
was writing Hamlet. Significantly, Monteverdi's
first operatic protagonist was Orpheus, the god of music;
his last was the flamboyant and dangerous Roman emperor,
Nero.
Without abandoning the classical milieu, opera composers
began to design distinctive musical means of embodying
the evolving
human self.
Portrait of Monteverdi.
Link
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The Chinese poetic tradition and the innovative self-presentation
of Tu Fu
The T'ang Dynasty (618907) in China precedes the
European Renaissance and cannot be easily assimilated to the
periodization of Western thought. Still, it marks a height
of lyric production in the visual and verbal arts that matches
the Renaissance in terms of the impact it made on its own
culture. Although we must always acknowledge the great gulf
between them and their worlds, we can claim that Tu Fu (712770)
and Montaigne share certain characteristics worth examining.
Like Montaigne, Tu Fu made himself the subject of his
book. Chinese poetry, it must be said, has always been
read and
understood as biographical, but the nature and means by
which Tu Fu practiced self-revelation in his poems remains
remarkable
to this day. The same sudden onset of new matter and obscuring
of obvious transitions that we observe in Montaigne's
essays or Hamlet's soliloquies inform Tu Fu's work,
and in each case, we feel in the presence of a mind energetic
and brave enough to pursue thoughts wherever they may go.
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