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Item Number: 145379
Title: 1668 : The Year of the Animal in France
Author: Sahlins, Peter
Price: Not Available
ISBN: 9781935408994
Description: Cambridge: MIT Press, 2017. 24cm., hardcover, 492pp., 13 color, 85 b&w illus.

Summary: The poet Jean de La Fontaine famously dedicated his Fables in 1668 to Louis XIV’s son, declaring in verse that “animals I choose/to proffer lessons that we all might use.” Less well known is that La Fontaine’s Fables appeared within a peak moment of cultural production about animals, the work of a small, but privileged coterie of writers, artists, philosophers, physicians, and scientists. In this book, Peter Sahlins argues that the animals of 1668 helped to shift an entire way of thinking about the relationship of animals and humans—what Sahlins calls “Renaissance humanimalism”—toward more recognizably modern expressions of classical naturalism. At the same time, Louis XIV used the animals of his newly constructed Versailles menagerie and of the Royal Labyrinth to transform the symbolic language of French absolutism. In the aftermath of 1668, Louis XIV adopted a new model of sovereignty in which the absolute authority of the king is justified by the bestial nature of his human subjects. 1668: The Year of the Animal in France is a unique interdisciplinary study with rich visual documentation and interpretation of the symbolic lives and afterlives of the animal kingdom at Versailles and Paris. Sahlins observes these animals in the animal palace designed by Louis Le Vau, the paintings and tapestries of Charles Le Brun, the garden installations of André Le Nôtre, the writings of Charles Perrault his brother Claude, the poetry of Madeleine de Scudéry, the philosophy of René Descartes, the engravings of Sébastien Leclerc, and the transfusion experiments of Jean Denis and others. Sahlins brings together the nonhuman and human agents of 1668—porcupines and painters, swans and scientists, egrets and engravers, cranes and craftsmen. Sahlins uncovers the critical importance of animals in 1668 and transforms the fields of human-animal studies and early modern French history.

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