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Marguerite of Navarre: a mystical fable
by
Fallica, Maria
in
Certeau, Michel de
/ Femininity
/ folly
/ Jesus Christ
/ learned ignorance
/ mystical theology
/ Porete, Marguerite
/ Pseudo-Dionysius
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
Marguerite of Navarre: a mystical fable
by
Fallica, Maria
in
Certeau, Michel de
/ Femininity
/ folly
/ Jesus Christ
/ learned ignorance
/ mystical theology
/ Porete, Marguerite
/ Pseudo-Dionysius
2025
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Journal Article
Marguerite of Navarre: a mystical fable
2025
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Overview
This essay proposes a reading of the feminine figure of folly in the works of Marguerite of Navarre (1492-1549), intended as a specific reception of the theme of the unintelligibility of God’s wisdom to humanity, the scandal of Christ’s cross in the eyes of worldly-wise, and the exaltation of the humble, the “nothing”, the rejected, the foolish (1 Cor 1:18–25; 3:19). The essay will focus on Marguerite’s sources, first and foremost her spiritual father, Guillaume Briçonnet, and the theological traditions that mediated this notion from late antiquity to the early modern era. In both Briçonnet and Marguerite, the gendered presupposition implying a closeness between femininity on the one hand, and, on the other hand, materiality and irrationality on the other plays in favor of this paradoxical reversal: gendered figures of folly, precisely because of their gender, can better represent the nothingness saved by grace. In doing this, their words intercept one of most famous characters of the literature of the century, Erasmus’ Madam Folly, a woman, an ambivalent and paradoxical prophetess of truths.
Publisher
Firenze University Press
Subject
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