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- Title
Versailles as a Family Enterprise: The Perraults, 1660-1700.
- Authors
Rabinovitch, Oded
- Abstract
Historians usually treat Versailles as a site of courtly interaction, or as a source for courtly "taste." This article, however, examines processes that connected Versailles to the wider world, arguing for a model of Versailles's role in the cultural politics of the monarchy, which stresses appropriations by men of letters and supplants "top-down" models of cultural absolutism. It explores the symbolic and material uses of Versailles in the social and intellectual ventures of the Perraults, a family of Parisian men of letters. While acting as authors, members of royal academies, or aides to Colbert, the Perraults used Versailles as a source of exotic animals for scientific dissection, a depository of manuscript texts, a weapon in literary struggles, and a site of sociability. As the Perraults appropriated Versailles, they used their access to the palace for their own devices, unrelated to the goals of a state-run propaganda machine; yet these appropriations brought Louis XIV's grandeur to new publics.
- Subjects
COURTS &; courtiers; PERRAULT, Charles, 1628-1703; PERRAULT, Claude, 1613-1688; HUYGENS, Christiaan, 1629-1695; LOUIS XIV, King of France, 1638-1715; CHATEAU de Versailles (Versailles, France); REIGN of Louis XIV, France, 1643-1715; SEVENTEENTH century; HISTORY
- Publication
French Historical Studies, 2013, Vol 36, Issue 3, p385
- ISSN
0016-1071
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1215/00161071-2141091