The Dream of Absolutism examines the political aesthetics of power
under Louis XIV. What was absolutism, and how did it work? What was
the function of the ostentatious display surrounding Louis XIV at
Versailles? What is gained—and what is lost—by approaching such
expressions of absolutism as propaganda, as present-day scholars tend
to do? In this sweeping reconsideration of absolutist culture, Hall
Bjørnstad argues that the exuberance of Louis XIV’s reign was not
top-down propaganda in any modern sense, but rather a dream dreamt
collectively, by king, court, image-makers, and nation alike.
Bjørnstad explores this dream through a sustained close analysis of a
corpus of absolutist artifacts, ranging from Charles Le Brun’s
famous paintings in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles via the king’s
secret Mémoires to two little-known particularly extravagant verbal
and textual celebrations of the king. The dream of absolutism,
Bjørnstad concludes, lives at the intersection of politics and
aesthetics. It is the carrier of a force that emerges as a glorious
image; a participatory emotional reality that requires reality to
conform to it. It is a dream, finally, that still shapes our
collective political imaginary today.
Les mer
Louis XIV and the Logic of Modernity
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226803975
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter