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The Rabelais Encyclopedia PDF

320 Pages·2004·2.25 MB·English
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THE RABELAIS ENCYCLOPEDIA THE RABELAIS ENCYCLOPEDIA EDITED BY Elizabeth Chesney Zegura GREENWOOD PRESS Westport, Connecticut • London Library of CongressCataloging-in-PublicationData The Rabelaisencyclopedia/ edited by ElizabethChesney Zegura. p. cm. Includes bibliographicalreferencesand index. ISBN 0–313–31034–3 (alk. paper) 1. Rabelais, Franc¸ois,ca. 1490–1553?—Encyclopedias. I. Chesney,ElizabethA., 1949– PQ1694.R32 2004 843'.3—dc22 2004042479 British LibraryCataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright (cid:1) 2004 by ElizabethChesney Zegura All rights reserved.No portion of this book may be reproduced,by any processor technique,without the express writtenconsent of the publisher. Libraryof Congress Catalog Card Number:2004042479 ISBN: 0–313–31034–3 First published in 2004 GreenwoodPress, 88 Post Road West, Westport,CT 06881 An imprint of GreenwoodPublishing Group, Inc. www.greenwood.com Printed in the United Statesof America TM The paperused in this book complies with the PermanentPaperStandardissued by the National InformationStandardsOrganization(Z39.48–1984). 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 For Krista Contents Introduction ix Chronology xiii Abbreviations xv Alphabetical List of Entries xvii Topical List of Entries xxi The Encyclopedia 1 Selected Bibliography 267 Index 273 About the Contributors 285 Introduction The very thought of a Rabelais encyclopedia is somewhat daunting to anyone familiar with the Renaissance physician’s fiction. Not only would the project be gargantuan if every name, theme, rhetorical device, and learned reference in the Five Books of Pan- tagruel were included, but the sheer hubris of attempting to catalog the “living waters” (3BK prol.—see Abbreviations) of this self-styled alchemist’scauldronseemsworthyof Rabelais’s trickster, Panurge, or even the fool Triboullet. The Pantagrueline tales are themselves encyclopedic, not just in the hyperbolic curriculum that Gargantua setsforth for his son (P 8), urging him to become an “abyss” of knowledge, but also in the compendiumofallusionstonavigation,theology,music,artandarchitecture,philosophy, medicine, and other disciplines that Rabelais amasses in his magnum opus. Hisinterests and areas of expertise are vast, in keeping with the ideal of the uomo universale or Renaissance Man; one goal of this volume is to showcase the fascinatingarrayoftopics that are grafted onto the mock-epic framework of the chronicles,transformingtheminto a richly textured tapestry of life in the sixteenth century. Somewouldarguethatthisrichnessisadouble-edgedsword:notonlyatreasuretrove of laughter, mind teasers, mock-epic hijinks, and insights into the French Renaissance, Rabelais’shybridandmultifaceteddiscoursealsooffersahostoflexicalandinterpretive challenges. For readers accustomed to well-defined genres, classically crafted plots,and transparent meanings, the hodgepodge of ingredients that make up Rabelais’s fiction, ranging from genealogies, lists, and a library catalog to surrealistic battle narratives, a flying pig, and the chatter of drunks, can at times be overwhelming. True, works of fantasy requiring leaps of logic and a suspension of disbelief abound in modern culture, as evidenced by the enormous popularity in film and fiction of Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, a saga often likened to Rabelais’s magnum opus for its epic proportions and inspiration, or even the Harry Potter books, similar to Rabelais’s earliest chronicles in their focus on children, games, education, and magic.Addingmorefueltothenarrator’s claimthatPantagruelis“incomparable”(prol.),however,thesemodernworksoffantasy lack the verbal prolixity, rapid shifts in tonality, and distinctive blend of high and low culture, scatology and learned references, piety and irreverence that keeps readers off balance in Rabelais. Not accidentally, given the risk of arrest and execution that faced humanists in Ren- aissance France who were too outspoken, Rabelais’s encyclopedic text isitselfaliterary shape shifter, at least from the reader’s standpoint. Depending on our familiarity with Rabelais’slearnedallusions,theparticularthematicthreadswefollowaswenavigatehis prose, and the critical apparatus or perspective we bring to the interpretive process, the unstable admixture of ingredients he includes in the crucible of his fiction seem tocom- bineandrecombineinahostofdifferentpatterns,whichvaryfromonereaderorreading to the next. The result is a Rabelais who is many things to many people: both a “mad dog”anda“refinedgenius”;agoodCatholic,anEvangelical,andanatheist;amisogynist and a closet feminist.

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The French humanist Rabelais (ca. 1483-1553) was the greatest French writer of the Renaissance and one of the most influential authors of all time. His Gargantua and Pantagruel, written in five books between 1532 and 1553, rivals the works of Shakespeare and Cervantes in terms of artistry, complexit
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