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Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns

The Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns (French: Querelle des Anciens et des Modernes) was a debate about literary and artistic merit, which expanded from the original debaters to the members of the Académie Française and the French literary community in the 17th century.

Charles Perrault, 17th century author who represented the Modernes

Origins of the debate edit

It was an essential feature of the European Renaissance to study the culture and institutions inherited from classical (Greek and Roman) antiquity.[1] In contrast to the medieval scholastic emphasis on Christian theology and unchanging monarchy, Renaissance humanists launched a movement to recover, interpret, and assimilate the language, literature, learning and values of ancient Greece and Rome.[2] The 15th century rediscovery of ancient texts and their wide distribution after the introduction, in about 1440, of the printing press into Europe, allowed a faster propagation of culture and ideas; and the resurgence of learning based on classical sources brought revolutions in many intellectual and social scientific pursuits.[3][4][5] For example, in the field of architectural theory, Filippo Brunelleschi revolutionized medieval architecture using the knowledge he rediscovered after studying the remains of ancient classical buildings, analyzing the works of 1st century writer Vitruvius, and understanding the mathematical principles that could be discerned from them.[6]

This cultural rebirth of the classical ideals of ancient times, and the following changes in scientific and artistic thought, gave rise to a reaction from those who perceived it as a danger to the stability of Christian civilization and wished to reassert the social and political values of medieval modernity.[7] The debate became known as a "quarrel," after the frequently made pun on Charles Perrault's title Parallèle des Anciens et des Modernes (Parallel between Ancients and Moderns, 1688–92); the word querelle being used in the place of parallèle.

Debate in France edit

The quarrel between the Classics and the Moderns opposes two distinct currents:

The Ancients (Anciens), led by Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux, say that literary creation has its roots in the fair appreciation of the heritage of antiquity. According to them, it's the test of time that makes the masterpieces, not the pedantic opinion of an elite of scholars; the worth of the famous authors from Greece and Rome is established by twenty centuries of universal admiration.[8] While recognizing the merits of the great writers of his time (Boileau predicted that Pierre Corneille, Jean Racine and Molière would be acclaimed as geniuses in centuries to come) it is also important to recognize the cumulative dimension of culture and study our predecessors.[9] The metaphor of the dwarves standing on the shoulders of giants illustrates this principle: by learning from the works of the great men of the past, it's possible to surpass them. Boileau has on his side the greatest French writers of his time, including Racine, Jean de La Fontaine, François Fénelon and Jean de La Bruyère.[10]

The Moderns (Modernes), represented by Perrault, maintain that, since the France of King Louis XIV surpasses all other states in history by its political and religious perfection, accomplished and matchless, it follows that the works created by 17th century authors to the glory of King and Church are necessarily superior to anything produced in the past centuries.[11] Therefore they fight for a new literature adapted to the modern era, complacent towards the Court of France, respectful of 17th century decorum, zealous for Catholic religion, renouncing the freedom of old classical authors and always seeking to celebrate the French monarchy and the Catholic Church.[12] Perrault has on his side the Académie, the devout party, the literary salons and a host of fashionable poets—who, in the present-day, are almost completely forgotten.[13]

The gradual takeover of the literary community by political powers during the 17th century—which included the creation of the Académie by Cardinal Richelieu (with Richelieu's men acting as supreme judges of all things literary), governmental censorship, the banning of controversial books (which sometimes also carried legal penalties against their authors), and the giving of pensions to authors who flattered the government—greatly favored Perrault, who had risen to prominence through the power and patronage of minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert, and bolstered his Modern party's views on artistic creation.[14][15]

From 1637 to 1694, the proponents of a literature adapted to modern times raged against the "Ancients". In 1637, Corneille's Le Cid was attacked in the salons and condemned by the Académie; accused of anti-patriotism and affronting decorum and morality.[16] The "Moderns" mobilized again in a 1663 attack against Molière's L'École des femmes, as well as in 1667 against Racine's Andromaque, and then in 1677 against Racine's Phèdre; all were called irreligious and outrageous to French customs and society.[17]

In 1674, Desmarets de Saint-Sorlin made a public call on his friend Perrault to "defend France" against "that heretical troop who prefers ancient works to our own." In response to this call, Perrault and his brother Claude tried to charge Boileau with the crimes of blasphemy and lèse-majesté on the grounds that he preferred the works of ancient pagan authors who wrote under a regime of liberty (in Classical Athens or the Ancient Roman Republic) to the works of modern, Catholic authors who submitted to the absolute monarchy of Louis XIV.[18]

One of the key episodes in the quarrel's development was the so-called Quarrel of the Inscriptions (French: querelle des inscriptions), which was triggered by Colbert's plan for a triumphal arch, glorifying Louis XIV's victories, to be erected on the ground that would later become the Place de la Nation in Paris (this construction project ended up being abandoned in around 1680 and the unfinished structures were demolished shortly after Louis XIV's death). The question was whether the inscriptions glorifying the King on the projected arch should be in Latin ("ancient") or French ("modern"). Antiquarian François Charpentier argued in favor of French inscriptions, and was countered by Jesuit Jean Lucas of the College de Clermont,[19] who defended the option of Latin, in an eloquent address, pronounced at the College on 25 November 1676 and which was published in 1677 under the title De Monumentis Publicis Latine Inscribendis Oratio.[20]

The actual episode that took the name of La Querelle happened a decade later and lasted from 1687 to 1694, starting with the reading in the Académie of Perrault's Le siècle de Louis le Grand (The Century of Louis the Great), in which he supported the merits of the authors of the century of Louis XIV and expressed the Moderns' stance in a nutshell:

The poem particularly attacks Homer, and other classical poets, whom Perrault considers overrated and mediocre. Upon hearing this, Boileau stood up and left in anger, saying he was ashamed that a countryman of his could have spoken like that.[22]

Between 1688 and 1692, Perrault wrote the four volumes of Parallèle des Anciens et des Modernes (Parallel between Ancients and Moderns) where he attempted to prove his ideas on literature. Boileau countered with satirical epigrams mocking Perrault's errors and, more seriously, his critical reflections on Longinus.[23]

In 1694, after a mediation by Antoine Arnauld, the two officially reconciled, but the prolonged and heated polemic left Perrault embittered and resentful. He threatened, in the following years, to write new pamphlets against Boileau, to which Boileau replied that he was "done with Perrault" and that whatever Perrault did was "completely indifferent to him."[24]

Racine showed himself one of the Ancients by focusing his choice of subjects on those drawn from the literature of antiquity. He also delimited his tragedies by the classical unities, derived by the classicists from Aristotle's Poetics; the unities of place, time, and action (one scene location, 24 hours, and consistent actions, respectively).

In the opening years of the 18th century, Pierre de Marivaux was to show himself a Modern by establishing a new genre of theatre—unknown to the Ancients—the sentimental comedy (comédie larmoyante). In it, the impending tragedy was resolved by the end, amid reconciliations and floods of tears.

Assessment edit

In the end, the Quarrel of the Ancients and Moderns was a cover, often a witty one, for opposing views of much deeper significance. One side was attached to the classic ideals of Greece and Rome and rejected a theory of art that turned literature into propaganda for the ruling powers, while the other contested the very idea of intellectual or aesthetic values above the authority of the King and the Church.

The renewal of interest in antiquity during the Age of Enlightenment led to a reassessment of the achievements of the classical past, and ended up subjecting the scriptures themselves to the scrutiny of critical thinkers. The attack on authority in politics and religion had analogues in the rise of scientific inquiry, and the challenge to royal and ecclesiastical authority in the literary field already announced the questioning of state and society at the time of the French Revolution, when absolute monarchy and state-sanctioned religion—the emblems of modernity—would be overthrown in the name of the ancient ideas of republic, democracy, and freedom of religion.[25][26]

Analogous 16th–20th-century debates edit

The Renaissance humanistic revolution, and its rediscovery of the intellectual achievements from classical (Greek and Roman) antiquity, brought about a divergence with medieval scholasticism and set the framework for the Scientific Revolution to come. Much as the Humanists had been preoccupied with uncovering the original meaning of language, literature and culture,[27] so too had the natural philosophers of a century later.

René Descartes (1596–1650) and Francis Bacon (1561–1626) set the tone of a return to nature in that they wanted to restart the entire project of science and humanities by determining laws based on an examination of reality rather than scripture. Their questioning would lead Descartes down a path of rationalism and Bacon down a path of empiricism. This calling of the natural philosophers (later to be named scientists) of a return to classical research methods based on observation, experience and rational theorization would allow for a great shift in European scientific thought.

Since the Early Middle Ages (sometimes referred to as the Dark Ages), Aristotle had been the backbone of the metanarrative of the system of Western academic knowledge officially endorsed by the Catholic Church. All philosophical discourse regarding nature (as well as its metanarrative) was held within the parameters of Catholic-approved Aristotelianism as set by Thomas Aquinas and other Doctors of the Church, which sought to harmoniously unite the totalizing aspect of God with a human understanding of nature that didn't contradict Church doctrine and was assumed to be perfect and complete. Aristotle's theories on the natural order were further substantiated by Ptolemy's geography and astronomy.[28]

This Aristotelian-Ptolemaic paradigm of scientific knowledge, particularly physics and astronomy, lasted unchallenged until the transformations in Western thought brought by the Renaissance, at which point the 16th and 17th centuries saw the union of a Copernican-Cartesian system of physics and astronomy open up a hefty first critique which was then completed by the union of the Galilean-Newtonian system of nature. The same transformation occurred in other fields of scientific knowledge, such as the medical theories of Galen and Avicenna becoming—under the authority of the Church—the mainstay of the medieval physician's university curriculum from the 11th century onwards, and the work of Renaissance men like Janus Cornarius and Michael Servetus, who questioned and challenged the established order, bringing about the fierce reaction of the defenders of medieval modernity (who burned Servetus's books in bonfires and had Cornarius' complete oeuvre put on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum, an index of texts prohibited by the Catholic Church.[29]

This debate in natural philosophy played a part in the Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns.[30] In 17th century France, the leaders of the Moderns, like Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet, were for medieval scholasticism, while the Ancients party supported the new discoveries. Thus, Boileau, Racine, and François Bernier brilliantly defended, in an Arrêt Burlesque (a work of literary satire), the rebirth (in French: renaissance) of philosophy and science, and ridiculed all those who feared changes in the status quo of modernity.[31][32] According to Claude Brossette, this Arrêt destroyed a project of the University of Paris to ban Cartesianism.[33] Boileau also wrote in defense of new forms of medical treatment, like the use of quinine, challenging the Moderns who were for Galenism and rejected any new developments.[34]

Isaac Newton took the side of the Ancients, against Robert Hooke, when he wrote that his work relied heavily upon the work of his predecessors, famously stating:

"If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants."[35]

Hooke, a partisan of the Moderns, claimed that microscopy had reached perfection in modern times and that it was impossible to do better, to which Newton replied predicting that the future would bring new instruments capable of magnifying four thousand times more powerfully, eventually making even the atom visible. Maria Popova has commented that "Newton's humility sprang from an early and formative understanding of how knowledge builds upon itself, incrementally improving upon existing ideas until the cumulative adds up to the revolutionary."[36]

Sir William Temple argued against the Modern position in his essay On Ancient and Modern Learning; therein he repeated the commonplace, originally from Bernard of Chartres, that we see more only because we are "dwarves standing on the shoulders of giants." Temple's essay prompted a small flurry of responses. Among others, two men who took the side opposing Temple were classicist and editor Richard Bentley and critic William Wotton.

The entire discussion in England was over by 1696, but it was revisited by Jonathan Swift, who saw in the opposing camps of Ancients and Moderns a shorthand of two general orientations or ways of life. He articulated his discussion most notably in his satire A Tale of a Tub, composed between 1694 and 1697, and published in 1704 with the famous prolegomenon The Battle of the Books, long after the initial salvoes were over in France. Swift's polarizing satire provided a framework for other satirists in his circle of the Scriblerians.

Two other distinguished 18th century philosophers who wrote at length concerning the distinction between Moderns and Ancients were Giambattista Vico (cf. e.g. his De nostri temporis studiorum ratione) and Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (for whom, the Moderns see "more," but the Ancients see "better").

In 19th century England, highlighting the distinction between Hellenism ("Athens"/reason or "sweetness and light") and Hebraism ("Jerusalem"/faith), Matthew Arnold defended the Ancients (most notably Plato and Aristotle) against the dominant progressive intellectual trends of his times. Arnold drew attention to the fact that the great divide between Ancients and Modernists pertained to the understanding of the relation between liberty/reason and authority. Arnold saw Thomas Carlyle as the great spokesman of Hebraism and duty in an age which needed Hellenism and culture.[37]

Countering the thrust of much of 20th century intellectual history and literary criticism, Leo Strauss has contended that the debate between Ancients and Moderns (or the defenders of either camp) is ill-understood when reduced to questions of progress or regress. Strauss himself revived the old querelle, siding with the Ancients (against the Modernist position advocated, e.g., by Strauss's friend Alexandre Kojève).[38]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Monfasani, John (2016). Renaissance Humanism, from the Middle Ages to Modern Times. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-351-90439-1.
  2. ^ Burke, P., "The spread of Italian humanism", in The Impact of Humanism on Western Europe, ed. A. Goodman and A. MacKay, London, 1990, p. 2.
  3. ^ Shapin, Steven. The Scientific Revolution, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996, p. 1.
  4. ^ BBC Science and Nature, Leonardo da Vinci Retrieved May 12, 2007
  5. ^ BBC History, Michelangelo Retrieved May 12, 2007
  6. ^ Hooker, Richard. Architecture and Public Space May 22, 2007, at the Wayback Machine (Retrieved May 10, 2007)
  7. ^ Hause, S. & Maltby, W. (2001). A History of European Society. Essentials of Western Civilization (Vol. 2, pp. 245–246). Belmont, CA: Thomson Learning, Inc.
  8. ^ George Alexander Kennedy, H. B. Nisbet, Claude Rawson, Raman Selden: The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism: Volume 4, The Eighteenth Century, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2005.
  9. ^ Marcel Hervier, L'Art Poétique de Boileau, étude et analyse (in French), Paris, Chefs-d'œuvre de la littérature expliqués, Mellottée, 1948, p. 213-219
  10. ^ Paddy Bullard, Alexis Tadié: Ancients and Moderns in Europe: Comparative Perspectives, Voltaire Foundation, 2016
  11. ^ Joan DeJean: Ancients Against Moderns: Culture Wars and the Making of a Fin de Siecle, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1997.
  12. ^ Larry F. Norman: The Shock of the Ancient: Literature and History in Early Modern France (Chapters 6 "Modernity & Monarchy" and 7 "The Pagan Menace"), University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2011.
  13. ^ Denis Hollier: A New History of French Literature, Harvard University Press, 1994.
  14. ^ David T. Pottinger, The French Book Trade in the Ancien Regime, 1500 – 1791, Harvard Univ. Press (1958).
  15. ^ George Alexander Kennedy, H. B. Nisbet, Claude Rawson, Raman Selden: The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism: Volume 4, The Eighteenth Century, pg,34–35, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2005.
  16. ^ Corneille and His Times, François M. Guizot; Harper & Bros., New York, 1852.
  17. ^ Philip George Hill (1983). Our Dramatic Heritage: The Golden Age. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. p. 590. ISBN 978-0-8386-3107-2.
  18. ^ Antoine Arnauld, letter to Dodart, 10 July 1694; in Lettres de Monsieur Antoine Arnauld, docteur de Sorbonne, V. 3 (in French), Nabu, 2011
  19. ^ "Jean Lucas (jésuite, 1638-1716)". Bibliothèque nationale de France.
  20. ^ Tim Denecker (2012), "Taaltheorie ter verdediging van het Latijn: Joannes Lucas S.J., De monumentis publicis Latine inscribendis oratio (1677)", Handelingen - Koninklijke Zuid-Nederlandse maatschappij voor taal- en letterkunde en geschiedenis, Mechelen, 66: 195–209
  21. ^ Perrault's poem was published in 1687 in François de Callières's Histoire poetique de la guerre nouvellement declarée entre les anciens et les modernes ("Poetic history of the war recently declared between the ancients and the moderns"), which was not itself strictly partisan of one side or the other.
  22. ^ Louis Augustus Triebel: Facets of France and French Literature, Australasian Publishing Company, 1952.
  23. ^ Chisholm, Hugh. "Boileau-Despréaux, Nicolas" in Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press, 1911.
  24. ^ Gordon Pocock: Boileau and the Nature of Neoclassicism, Cambridge University Press, 1980; Literary Criticism Collection
  25. ^ Fehér, Ferenc: The French Revolution and the Birth of Modernity; University of California Press, 1992. ISBN 978-0-520-07120-9.
  26. ^ Doyle, William: The Oxford History of the French Revolution; Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0-19-160829-2.
  27. ^ Nauert, Charles G. Jr. (2006). Humanism and the culture of Renaissance Europe (Second ed.). Cambridge, United Kingdom. ISBN 978-0-521-83909-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  28. ^ Jones, A., ed. (2010). Ptolemy in Perspective: Use and Criticism of His Work from Antiquity to the Nineteenth Century. Archimedes. Springer Netherlands. ISBN 978-90-481-2787-0.
  29. ^ Paul F. Grendler, "Printing and Censorship," in The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy, edited by Charles B. Schmitt et al. (Cambridge University Press, 1991), p. 46.
  30. ^ Walton, Conor (1995). The Battle of the Ancients and the Moderns. University of Essex.
  31. ^ Nicolas Boileau : Le lutrin, Dialogue des héros de roman, Arrêt burlesque, revised and annotated by Charles-Marc Des Granges; Volume 66 of the collection "Les Classiques pour tous; Hatier, 1948.
  32. ^ Robin, Jean Luc (August 2007). "L'Indiscipline de l'Arrêt burlesque et les deux voies de la légitimation du discours scientifique". Seventeenth-Century French Studies. 29 (1): 101–111. doi:10.1179/175226907X226029. S2CID 194016483.
  33. ^ Ch.-H. Boudhors, « Notices et notes », p. 141, in Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux, Dissertation sur la Joconde, Arrest Burlesque, Traité du Sublime, Paris, Société Les Belles Lettres, 1942.
  34. ^ Rocco F (2004). Quinine: malaria and the quest for a cure that changed the world. New York, NY: Perennial.
  35. ^ Isaac Newton: The Correspondence of Isaac Newton, Volume 3, published for the Royal Society at the University Press, 1959.
  36. ^ "Standing on the Shoulders of Giants: The Story Behind Newton's Famous Metaphor for How Knowledge Progresses". February 16, 2016.
  37. ^ Cumming, Mark, ed. (2004). "Arnold, Matthew". The Carlyle Encyclopedia. Madison and Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-8386-3792-0.
  38. ^ Leo Strauss, the Straussians, and the American Regime by Kenneth Deutch (1999).

References edit

  • Matthew Arnold, Culture and Anarchy and other writings Ed. Stefan Collini. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.
  • David A. Boruchoff, "The Three Greatest Inventions of Modern Times: An Idea and Its Public." In: Entangled Knowledge: Scientific Discourses and Cultural Difference. Ed. Klaus Hock and Gesa Mackenthun. Münster and New York: Waxmann, 2012, pp. 133–63. ISBN 978-3-8309-2729-7.
  • Joseph Cropsey (ed.), Ancients and Moderns: Essays on the Tradition of Political Philosophy in Honor of Leo Strauss, New York, Basic Books, 1964 ISBN 0-465-00326-5.
  • Joan DeJean, Ancients against Moderns: Culture Wars and the Making of a Fin de Siècle, Chicago: University Of Chicago Press, 1997, ISBN 978-0-226-14138-1.
  • Joseph M. Levine, The Battle of the Books: History and Literature in the Augustan Age, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1991.
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Politics and the Arts: Letter to M. D'Alembert on the Theatre, translated and with an introduction by Allan Bloom. Cornell: Cornell University Press, 1960.
  • Levent Yılmaz, Le temps moderne: Variations sur les Anciens et les contemporains, Paris: Editions Gallimard, 2004.

External links edit

  • Dictionary of the History of Ideas Ancients and Moderns in the Eighteenth Century

quarrel, ancients, moderns, ancient, modern, redirects, here, hymn, book, hymns, ancient, modern, french, querelle, anciens, modernes, debate, about, literary, artistic, merit, which, expanded, from, original, debaters, members, académie, française, french, li. Ancient and Modern redirects here For the hymn book see Hymns Ancient and Modern The Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns French Querelle des Anciens et des Modernes was a debate about literary and artistic merit which expanded from the original debaters to the members of the Academie Francaise and the French literary community in the 17th century Charles Perrault 17th century author who represented the Modernes Contents 1 Origins of the debate 2 Debate in France 3 Assessment 4 Analogous 16th 20th century debates 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksOrigins of the debate editIt was an essential feature of the European Renaissance to study the culture and institutions inherited from classical Greek and Roman antiquity 1 In contrast to the medieval scholastic emphasis on Christian theology and unchanging monarchy Renaissance humanists launched a movement to recover interpret and assimilate the language literature learning and values of ancient Greece and Rome 2 The 15th century rediscovery of ancient texts and their wide distribution after the introduction in about 1440 of the printing press into Europe allowed a faster propagation of culture and ideas and the resurgence of learning based on classical sources brought revolutions in many intellectual and social scientific pursuits 3 4 5 For example in the field of architectural theory Filippo Brunelleschi revolutionized medieval architecture using the knowledge he rediscovered after studying the remains of ancient classical buildings analyzing the works of 1st century writer Vitruvius and understanding the mathematical principles that could be discerned from them 6 This cultural rebirth of the classical ideals of ancient times and the following changes in scientific and artistic thought gave rise to a reaction from those who perceived it as a danger to the stability of Christian civilization and wished to reassert the social and political values of medieval modernity 7 The debate became known as a quarrel after the frequently made pun on Charles Perrault s title Parallele des Anciens et des Modernes Parallel between Ancients and Moderns 1688 92 the word querelle being used in the place of parallele Debate in France editThe quarrel between the Classics and the Moderns opposes two distinct currents The Ancients Anciens led by Nicolas Boileau Despreaux say that literary creation has its roots in the fair appreciation of the heritage of antiquity According to them it s the test of time that makes the masterpieces not the pedantic opinion of an elite of scholars the worth of the famous authors from Greece and Rome is established by twenty centuries of universal admiration 8 While recognizing the merits of the great writers of his time Boileau predicted that Pierre Corneille Jean Racine and Moliere would be acclaimed as geniuses in centuries to come it is also important to recognize the cumulative dimension of culture and study our predecessors 9 The metaphor of the dwarves standing on the shoulders of giants illustrates this principle by learning from the works of the great men of the past it s possible to surpass them Boileau has on his side the greatest French writers of his time including Racine Jean de La Fontaine Francois Fenelon and Jean de La Bruyere 10 The Moderns Modernes represented by Perrault maintain that since the France of King Louis XIV surpasses all other states in history by its political and religious perfection accomplished and matchless it follows that the works created by 17th century authors to the glory of King and Church are necessarily superior to anything produced in the past centuries 11 Therefore they fight for a new literature adapted to the modern era complacent towards the Court of France respectful of 17th century decorum zealous for Catholic religion renouncing the freedom of old classical authors and always seeking to celebrate the French monarchy and the Catholic Church 12 Perrault has on his side the Academie the devout party the literary salons and a host of fashionable poets who in the present day are almost completely forgotten 13 The gradual takeover of the literary community by political powers during the 17th century which included the creation of the Academie by Cardinal Richelieu with Richelieu s men acting as supreme judges of all things literary governmental censorship the banning of controversial books which sometimes also carried legal penalties against their authors and the giving of pensions to authors who flattered the government greatly favored Perrault who had risen to prominence through the power and patronage of minister Jean Baptiste Colbert and bolstered his Modern party s views on artistic creation 14 15 From 1637 to 1694 the proponents of a literature adapted to modern times raged against the Ancients In 1637 Corneille s Le Cid was attacked in the salons and condemned by the Academie accused of anti patriotism and affronting decorum and morality 16 The Moderns mobilized again in a 1663 attack against Moliere s L Ecole des femmes as well as in 1667 against Racine s Andromaque and then in 1677 against Racine s Phedre all were called irreligious and outrageous to French customs and society 17 In 1674 Desmarets de Saint Sorlin made a public call on his friend Perrault to defend France against that heretical troop who prefers ancient works to our own In response to this call Perrault and his brother Claude tried to charge Boileau with the crimes of blasphemy and lese majeste on the grounds that he preferred the works of ancient pagan authors who wrote under a regime of liberty in Classical Athens or the Ancient Roman Republic to the works of modern Catholic authors who submitted to the absolute monarchy of Louis XIV 18 One of the key episodes in the quarrel s development was the so called Quarrel of the Inscriptions French querelle des inscriptions which was triggered by Colbert s plan for a triumphal arch glorifying Louis XIV s victories to be erected on the ground that would later become the Place de la Nation in Paris this construction project ended up being abandoned in around 1680 and the unfinished structures were demolished shortly after Louis XIV s death The question was whether the inscriptions glorifying the King on the projected arch should be in Latin ancient or French modern Antiquarian Francois Charpentier argued in favor of French inscriptions and was countered by Jesuit Jean Lucas of the College de Clermont 19 who defended the option of Latin in an eloquent address pronounced at the College on 25 November 1676 and which was published in 1677 under the title De Monumentis Publicis Latine Inscribendis Oratio 20 The actual episode that took the name of La Querelle happened a decade later and lasted from 1687 to 1694 starting with the reading in the Academie of Perrault s Le siecle de Louis le Grand The Century of Louis the Great in which he supported the merits of the authors of the century of Louis XIV and expressed the Moderns stance in a nutshell La docte antiquite dans toute sa duree A l egal de nos jours ne fut point eclairee dd Learned antiquity through all its extent Was never enlightened to equal our times 21 dd The poem particularly attacks Homer and other classical poets whom Perrault considers overrated and mediocre Upon hearing this Boileau stood up and left in anger saying he was ashamed that a countryman of his could have spoken like that 22 Between 1688 and 1692 Perrault wrote the four volumes of Parallele des Anciens et des Modernes Parallel between Ancients and Moderns where he attempted to prove his ideas on literature Boileau countered with satirical epigrams mocking Perrault s errors and more seriously his critical reflections on Longinus 23 In 1694 after a mediation by Antoine Arnauld the two officially reconciled but the prolonged and heated polemic left Perrault embittered and resentful He threatened in the following years to write new pamphlets against Boileau to which Boileau replied that he was done with Perrault and that whatever Perrault did was completely indifferent to him 24 Racine showed himself one of the Ancients by focusing his choice of subjects on those drawn from the literature of antiquity He also delimited his tragedies by the classical unities derived by the classicists from Aristotle s Poetics the unities of place time and action one scene location 24 hours and consistent actions respectively In the opening years of the 18th century Pierre de Marivaux was to show himself a Modern by establishing a new genre of theatre unknown to the Ancients the sentimental comedy comedie larmoyante In it the impending tragedy was resolved by the end amid reconciliations and floods of tears Assessment editIn the end the Quarrel of the Ancients and Moderns was a cover often a witty one for opposing views of much deeper significance One side was attached to the classic ideals of Greece and Rome and rejected a theory of art that turned literature into propaganda for the ruling powers while the other contested the very idea of intellectual or aesthetic values above the authority of the King and the Church The renewal of interest in antiquity during the Age of Enlightenment led to a reassessment of the achievements of the classical past and ended up subjecting the scriptures themselves to the scrutiny of critical thinkers The attack on authority in politics and religion had analogues in the rise of scientific inquiry and the challenge to royal and ecclesiastical authority in the literary field already announced the questioning of state and society at the time of the French Revolution when absolute monarchy and state sanctioned religion the emblems of modernity would be overthrown in the name of the ancient ideas of republic democracy and freedom of religion 25 26 Analogous 16th 20th century debates editThe Renaissance humanistic revolution and its rediscovery of the intellectual achievements from classical Greek and Roman antiquity brought about a divergence with medieval scholasticism and set the framework for the Scientific Revolution to come Much as the Humanists had been preoccupied with uncovering the original meaning of language literature and culture 27 so too had the natural philosophers of a century later Rene Descartes 1596 1650 and Francis Bacon 1561 1626 set the tone of a return to nature in that they wanted to restart the entire project of science and humanities by determining laws based on an examination of reality rather than scripture Their questioning would lead Descartes down a path of rationalism and Bacon down a path of empiricism This calling of the natural philosophers later to be named scientists of a return to classical research methods based on observation experience and rational theorization would allow for a great shift in European scientific thought Since the Early Middle Ages sometimes referred to as the Dark Ages Aristotle had been the backbone of the metanarrative of the system of Western academic knowledge officially endorsed by the Catholic Church All philosophical discourse regarding nature as well as its metanarrative was held within the parameters of Catholic approved Aristotelianism as set by Thomas Aquinas and other Doctors of the Church which sought to harmoniously unite the totalizing aspect of God with a human understanding of nature that didn t contradict Church doctrine and was assumed to be perfect and complete Aristotle s theories on the natural order were further substantiated by Ptolemy s geography and astronomy 28 This Aristotelian Ptolemaic paradigm of scientific knowledge particularly physics and astronomy lasted unchallenged until the transformations in Western thought brought by the Renaissance at which point the 16th and 17th centuries saw the union of a Copernican Cartesian system of physics and astronomy open up a hefty first critique which was then completed by the union of the Galilean Newtonian system of nature The same transformation occurred in other fields of scientific knowledge such as the medical theories of Galen and Avicenna becoming under the authority of the Church the mainstay of the medieval physician s university curriculum from the 11th century onwards and the work of Renaissance men like Janus Cornarius and Michael Servetus who questioned and challenged the established order bringing about the fierce reaction of the defenders of medieval modernity who burned Servetus s books in bonfires and had Cornarius complete oeuvre put on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum an index of texts prohibited by the Catholic Church 29 This debate in natural philosophy played a part in the Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns 30 In 17th century France the leaders of the Moderns like Jacques Benigne Bossuet were for medieval scholasticism while the Ancients party supported the new discoveries Thus Boileau Racine and Francois Bernier brilliantly defended in an Arret Burlesque a work of literary satire the rebirth in French renaissance of philosophy and science and ridiculed all those who feared changes in the status quo of modernity 31 32 According to Claude Brossette this Arret destroyed a project of the University of Paris to ban Cartesianism 33 Boileau also wrote in defense of new forms of medical treatment like the use of quinine challenging the Moderns who were for Galenism and rejected any new developments 34 Isaac Newton took the side of the Ancients against Robert Hooke when he wrote that his work relied heavily upon the work of his predecessors famously stating If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants 35 dd Hooke a partisan of the Moderns claimed that microscopy had reached perfection in modern times and that it was impossible to do better to which Newton replied predicting that the future would bring new instruments capable of magnifying four thousand times more powerfully eventually making even the atom visible Maria Popova has commented that Newton s humility sprang from an early and formative understanding of how knowledge builds upon itself incrementally improving upon existing ideas until the cumulative adds up to the revolutionary 36 Sir William Temple argued against the Modern position in his essay On Ancient and Modern Learning therein he repeated the commonplace originally from Bernard of Chartres that we see more only because we are dwarves standing on the shoulders of giants Temple s essay prompted a small flurry of responses Among others two men who took the side opposing Temple were classicist and editor Richard Bentley and critic William Wotton The entire discussion in England was over by 1696 but it was revisited by Jonathan Swift who saw in the opposing camps of Ancients and Moderns a shorthand of two general orientations or ways of life He articulated his discussion most notably in his satire A Tale of a Tub composed between 1694 and 1697 and published in 1704 with the famous prolegomenon The Battle of the Books long after the initial salvoes were over in France Swift s polarizing satire provided a framework for other satirists in his circle of the Scriblerians Two other distinguished 18th century philosophers who wrote at length concerning the distinction between Moderns and Ancients were Giambattista Vico cf e g his De nostri temporis studiorum ratione and Gotthold Ephraim Lessing for whom the Moderns see more but the Ancients see better In 19th century England highlighting the distinction between Hellenism Athens reason or sweetness and light and Hebraism Jerusalem faith Matthew Arnold defended the Ancients most notably Plato and Aristotle against the dominant progressive intellectual trends of his times Arnold drew attention to the fact that the great divide between Ancients and Modernists pertained to the understanding of the relation between liberty reason and authority Arnold saw Thomas Carlyle as the great spokesman of Hebraism and duty in an age which needed Hellenism and culture 37 Countering the thrust of much of 20th century intellectual history and literary criticism Leo Strauss has contended that the debate between Ancients and Moderns or the defenders of either camp is ill understood when reduced to questions of progress or regress Strauss himself revived the old querelle siding with the Ancients against the Modernist position advocated e g by Strauss s friend Alexandre Kojeve 38 See also editClassicism Neoclassicism Learned medicine Poussinists and Rubenists The Two CulturesNotes edit Monfasani John 2016 Renaissance Humanism from the Middle Ages to Modern Times Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 351 90439 1 Burke P The spread of Italian humanism in The Impact of Humanism on Western Europe ed A Goodman and A MacKay London 1990 p 2 Shapin Steven The Scientific Revolution Chicago University of Chicago Press 1996 p 1 BBC Science and Nature Leonardo da Vinci Retrieved May 12 2007 BBC History Michelangelo Retrieved May 12 2007 Hooker Richard Architecture and Public SpaceArchived May 22 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved May 10 2007 Hause S amp Maltby W 2001 A History of European Society Essentials of Western Civilization Vol 2 pp 245 246 Belmont CA Thomson Learning Inc George Alexander Kennedy H B Nisbet Claude Rawson Raman Selden The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism Volume 4 The Eighteenth Century Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2005 Marcel Hervier L Art Poetique de Boileau etude et analyse in French Paris Chefs d œuvre de la litterature expliques Mellottee 1948 p 213 219 Paddy Bullard Alexis Tadie Ancients and Moderns in Europe Comparative Perspectives Voltaire Foundation 2016 Joan DeJean Ancients Against Moderns Culture Wars and the Making of a Fin de Siecle University of Chicago Press Chicago 1997 Larry F Norman The Shock of the Ancient Literature and History in Early Modern France Chapters 6 Modernity amp Monarchy and 7 The Pagan Menace University of Chicago Press Chicago 2011 Denis Hollier A New History of French Literature Harvard University Press 1994 David T Pottinger The French Book Trade in the Ancien Regime 1500 1791 Harvard Univ Press 1958 George Alexander Kennedy H B Nisbet Claude Rawson Raman Selden The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism Volume 4 The Eighteenth Century pg 34 35 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2005 Corneille and His Times Francois M Guizot Harper amp Bros New York 1852 Philip George Hill 1983 Our Dramatic Heritage The Golden Age Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press p 590 ISBN 978 0 8386 3107 2 Antoine Arnauld letter to Dodart 10 July 1694 in Lettres de Monsieur Antoine Arnauld docteur de Sorbonne V 3 in French Nabu 2011 Jean Lucas jesuite 1638 1716 Bibliotheque nationale de France Tim Denecker 2012 Taaltheorie ter verdediging van het Latijn Joannes Lucas S J De monumentis publicis Latine inscribendis oratio 1677 Handelingen Koninklijke Zuid Nederlandse maatschappij voor taal en letterkunde en geschiedenis Mechelen 66 195 209 Perrault s poem was published in 1687 in Francois de Callieres s Histoire poetique de la guerre nouvellement declaree entre les anciens et les modernes Poetic history of the war recently declared between the ancients and the moderns which was not itself strictly partisan of one side or the other Louis Augustus Triebel Facets of France and French Literature Australasian Publishing Company 1952 Chisholm Hugh Boileau Despreaux Nicolas in Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press 1911 Gordon Pocock Boileau and the Nature of Neoclassicism Cambridge University Press 1980 Literary Criticism Collection Feher Ferenc The French Revolution and the Birth of Modernity University of California Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 520 07120 9 Doyle William The Oxford History of the French Revolution Oxford University Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 19 160829 2 Nauert Charles G Jr 2006 Humanism and the culture of Renaissance Europe Second ed Cambridge United Kingdom ISBN 978 0 521 83909 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Jones A ed 2010 Ptolemy in Perspective Use and Criticism of His Work from Antiquity to the Nineteenth Century Archimedes Springer Netherlands ISBN 978 90 481 2787 0 Paul F Grendler Printing and Censorship in The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy edited by Charles B Schmitt et al Cambridge University Press 1991 p 46 Walton Conor 1995 The Battle of the Ancients and the Moderns University of Essex Nicolas Boileau Le lutrin Dialogue des heros de roman Arret burlesque revised and annotated by Charles Marc Des Granges Volume 66 of the collection Les Classiques pour tous Hatier 1948 Robin Jean Luc August 2007 L Indiscipline de l Arret burlesque et les deux voies de la legitimation du discours scientifique Seventeenth Century French Studies 29 1 101 111 doi 10 1179 175226907X226029 S2CID 194016483 Ch H Boudhors Notices et notes p 141 in Nicolas Boileau Despreaux Dissertation sur la Joconde Arrest Burlesque Traite du Sublime Paris Societe Les Belles Lettres 1942 Rocco F 2004 Quinine malaria and the quest for a cure that changed the world New York NY Perennial Isaac Newton The Correspondence of Isaac Newton Volume 3 published for the Royal Society at the University Press 1959 Standing on the Shoulders of Giants The Story Behind Newton s Famous Metaphor for How Knowledge Progresses February 16 2016 Cumming Mark ed 2004 Arnold Matthew The Carlyle Encyclopedia Madison and Teaneck NJ Fairleigh Dickinson University Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 8386 3792 0 Leo Strauss the Straussians and the American Regime by Kenneth Deutch 1999 References editMatthew Arnold Culture and Anarchy and other writings Ed Stefan Collini Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1993 David A Boruchoff The Three Greatest Inventions of Modern Times An Idea and Its Public In Entangled Knowledge Scientific Discourses and Cultural Difference Ed Klaus Hock and Gesa Mackenthun Munster and New York Waxmann 2012 pp 133 63 ISBN 978 3 8309 2729 7 Joseph Cropsey ed Ancients and Moderns Essays on the Tradition of Political Philosophy in Honor of Leo Strauss New York Basic Books 1964 ISBN 0 465 00326 5 Joan DeJean Ancients against Moderns Culture Wars and the Making of a Fin de Siecle Chicago University Of Chicago Press 1997 ISBN 978 0 226 14138 1 Joseph M Levine The Battle of the Books History and Literature in the Augustan Age Ithaca Cornell University Press 1991 Jean Jacques Rousseau Politics and the Arts Letter to M D Alembert on the Theatre translated and with an introduction by Allan Bloom Cornell Cornell University Press 1960 Levent Yilmaz Le temps moderne Variations sur les Anciens et les contemporains Paris Editions Gallimard 2004 External links editDictionary of the History of Ideas Ancients and Moderns in the Eighteenth Century Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns amp oldid 1184229135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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