Of Sceptres and Censors: Biblical Interpretation and Censorship in Seventeenth-Century France |
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Authors: | Shelford April G. |
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Affiliation: | * April G. Shelford is Assistant Professor of History, American University, Washington, DC (shelfor{at}american.edu). |
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Abstract: | In 1676 Pierre-Daniel Huet, scholar and tutor to the Dauphin,encountered difficulties with state censorship. Bishop Bossuetwas blocking the publication of his Demonstratio evangelica,a recasting of an ancient Christian apologetic. The Sorbonnetheologian and censor, Edme Pirot, was caught in the middle.An analysis of the interaction between these three men revealsAncien Régime censorship as a series of negotiationsshaped by the different stakes, personalities, ambitions andstatus of the participants. Huet and Bossuets quarrelalso echoed the confessional debates of the sixteenth centuryand reflected disagreements within the Catholic Church thereafter.It raised such important questions as whether the Bible shouldbe subjected to the same types of analysis as secular textsand anticipated concerns about the relationship between biblicalcriticism and the rise of irreligion. Throughout, Bossuet skilfullymanipulated the mechanisms of state censorship to defend hisvision of Church Tradition by delaying the publication of HuetsDemonstratio and suppressing Richard Simons Lhistoirecritique du Vieux Testament. |
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