ABSTRACT

Today the friendships that grab people’s imaginations are those that reach across inequalities of class and race. The friendships that seem to have exerted an analogous level of fascination in early modern France were those that defied the assumption, inherited from Aristotle and patristic sources, that friendships between men and women were impossible. Together, the essays in Men and Women Making Friends in Early Modern France tell the story of the declining intelligibility of classical models of (male) friendship and of the rising prominence of women as potential friends. The revival of Plato’s friendship texts in the sixteenth century challenged Aristotle’s rigid ideal of perfect friendship between men. In the seventeenth century, a new imperative of heterosociality opened a space for the cultivation of cross-gender friendships, while the spiritual friendships of the Catholic Reformation modeled relationships that transcended the gendered dynamics of galanterie. Men and Women Making Friends in Early Modern France argues that the imaginative experimentation in friendships between men and women was a distinctive feature of early modern French culture. The ten essays in this volume address friend-making as a process that is creative of self and responsive to changing social and political circumstances. Contributors reveal how men and women fashioned gendered selves, and also circumvented gender norms through concrete friendship practices. By showing that the benefits and the risks of friendship are magnified when gender roles and relations are unsettled, the essays in this volume highlight the relevance of early modern friend-making to friendship in the contemporary world.

chapter 1|30 pages

Introduction

Men and Women Making Friends in Early Modern France

chapter 2|30 pages

Was Montaigne a Good Friend?

chapter 3|20 pages

The Power to Correct

Beating Men in Service Friendship

chapter 4|18 pages

Redressing Ficino, Redeeming Desire

Symphorien Champier's La nef des dames vertueuses

chapter 5|20 pages

Translating Friendship in the Circle of Marguerite de Navarre

Plato's Lysis and Lucian's Toxaris

chapter 6|16 pages

From Reception to Assassination

French Negotiations of “Platonic Love”

chapter 7|26 pages

Friends of Friends

Intellectual and Literary Sociability in the Age of Richelieu

chapter 8|28 pages

Making Friends, Practicing Equality

The Correspondence of René Descartes and Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia

chapter 10|28 pages

The Marquise de Sablé and Her Friends

Men and Women between the Convent and the World

chapter 11|20 pages

From My Lips to Yours

Friendship, Confidentiality, and Gender in Early Modern France