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Montaigne's on physiognomy
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 05:12 authored by Adriana BonteaThe present essay situates Montaigne's writing practice in the context of the Renaissance natural sciences, among which physiognomy was a popular field of investigation. Aimed at establishing connective patterns between human features and natural properties, physiognomic treatises of the time provide Montaigne with a terminology and a catalogue of sensible association the Essays remove from their original framework and adapt to the purpose of a faithful representation of the self, able to incorporate the whole range of sixteenth-century experience. A close analysis of the sensible associations based on secondary qualities, which subsequent classical philosophy obliterates, allows identifying the leading thread of Montaigne's essays beyond discontinuities of subject matters. The search for meaningful connections between remote spheres of experience, results in a practice of writing devised in opposition with both Baroque vernacular poetics and Baroque painting. Montaigne's claim to paint himself naked retrieves its full meaning from extending established physiognomic connections based on bodily features to rhetoric, history, and everyday encounters. By broadening the inventory of natural properties registered by the art of physiognomy, Montaigne's essays justify nature as a basis for all human undertakings and recognize in its richness a legitimate purpose of all inquiries, which both physics and metaphysics attempt to address.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Renaissance StudiesISSN
0269-1213Publisher
Blackwell PublishingExternal DOI
Issue
1Volume
22Page range
41-62Department affiliated with
- English Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes
Legacy Posted Date
2012-02-06Usage metrics
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