Abstract
John Calvin's “Traité des reliques” (1543) inventories early modern Europe's fraudulent relics. Yet, theologically speaking, authenticity is irrelevant: all relics are idols to the evangelical Protestant, while for Catholics prayer's intention, not its conduit, was paramount. This article locates a solution in Calvin's humanist formation: chiefly, his debt to Desiderius Erasmus—not to Erasmus's satirical or devotional works, but to his rhetorical theory of copia. The “Traité” amasses a copia, an abundance, of fakes, burying the cult of relics in its own contradictions. Fusing rhetoric and proof, this mass juxtaposition subjects sacred presence to noncontradiction, patrolling vital confessional borders in Reformation theology.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,History
Reference103 articles.
1. Calvin and Christ's Presence in the Supper—True or Real
2. Naquin, Nicholas . “ ‘On the Shoulders of Hercules’: Erasmus, the Froben Press and the 1516 Jerome Edition in Context .” PhD diss., Princeton University, 2013.
3. Table Manner;Grafton;Cabinet,2010
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