Representing Mental Illness in Late Medieval France: Machines, Madness, Metaphor

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An exploration of the medieval mind as a machine, and how it might be affected and immobiled, in textual reactions to the madness of Charles VI of France. At the turn of the fifteenth century it must have seemed to many French people that the world was going mad. King Charles VI suffered his first bout of mental illness in 1392, and he underwent intermittent bouts of frenzy, melancholy and ever-scarcer lucidity until his death in 1422. The king's scarcely mentionable malady was mirrored at every level of social experience, from the irrational civil war through which the body politic tore itself apart, to reports of elevated suicide rates among the common people. In this political environment, where affairs of state were closely linked to the ruler's mental state, French writers sought new ways of representing the psychological dynamics of the body politic. This book explores the innovative mix of organic and inorganic metaphors through which they explored the relationship between mind, body and government at this period; in particular, it considers texts by such authors as Alan Chartier and Charles d'Orléans which describe mental illness and intellectual impairments through the notion of "rust".

Author(s): Julie Singer
Series: Gallica, 43
Publisher: D. S. Brewer
Year: 2018

Language: English
Pages: 374
City: Cambridge

List of Illustrations viii
Acknowledgements ix
List of Abbreviations xi
Introduction: Oxidation Before Oxygen 1
1. Of Metal and Men 39
2. 'Une enroullure de sapience': Instituting Princely Virtues at the Court of Charles V 79
3. Metaphors of the Body Politic 121
4. 'Le fer en la playe' 173
5. Alain Chartier’s 'rooil de oubliance' 245
Epilogue: Men Without Machines 291
Bibliography 313
Index