
François Rabelais and the Renaissance Physiology of Invention Ingenious Animation
by Garrod, RaphaëleBuy New
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Summary
Bodily functions are a trademark of Rabelais' poetics. Scholarship has read them as signs of carnivalesque inversion, in line with the Bakhtinian grotesque, or of satirical degradation: in both instances, the 'lowly' is opposed to the 'high', the belly to the head. Yet for a physician like Rabelais, the 'head' or the brain as the site of cognition is not opposed to what is below it: the chest as the site of breathing, the belly and its nether regions as sites of nutrition and generation. In Renaissance medicine, these are integrated physiological systems whose products fuel each other's operations-including cognition.
Read through this lens and alongside his diagnosis of the healthy or diseased culture of his time-rotting scholasticism, the humanist digestion of the classical heritage, or the schismatic convulsions shaking Christianity-Rabelais's fictions testify to his reflexive investigation into how culture results from physiological processes fuelling the inventive ability of the human animal, made manifest in pedagogical, artistic, mechanical, and spiritual 'inventions'. They display the life-rather than the truth-of culture stemming from human ingenia, that is, wits conditioned by biological natures. While these might be idiosyncratic, their animation is fuelled and shaped by the food one eats, the air one breathes, the places one inhabit, the company one keeps.
In this respect Rabelaisian fiction is grotesque in a period sense. With its emphasis on hybrid forms capturing the metamorphic powers of animation, grotesque ornament reflexively commented on the embodied inventive processes underpinning Renaissance mimesis. Rabelais's fictions display a similar logic: they foreground the inventive powers of ingenious animation and articulate reflexive, often ironic alternatives to the humanist views they alter: a thoroughly embodied anthropology, a naturalist genealogy of cultural production and transmission, a phantastical account of artistic invention as uncanny liveliness.
Author Biography
Raphaële Garrod is tutorial fellow at Magdalen College, Oxford and Associate Professor of Early Modern French at the University of Oxford. She obtained her PhD in early modern French from Trinity College, Cambridge, and went on to several postdoctoral positions in Cambridge and Australia. She was a secondary-school teacher in France before embarking on postgraduate studies in the UK.
Her current work focuses on conceptions and representations of the human at the intersection between early modern intellectual history (especially history of science) and poetics in XVIth- and XVIIth-French and European texts.
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