Au-delà du moralisme : Madame de Genlis et l’hospitalité
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18352/relief.851Keywords:
Genlis, virtue, hospitality, convents, Jaucourt.Abstract
Few political philosophers have taken an interest in the oeuvre of Genlis, partly because it is often reduced to an insipid religious moralism. While Alice Laborde concludes her biography by emphasizing that Genlis “is above all a moralist”, Mary Trouille’s recent work equally stresses the fact that the countess is “moralist to the core”. The aim of the present article is to nuance this reading, not by denying Genlis’ moralism, but by showing that it didn’t prevent her from publishing texts of a political nature that merit our attention today – particularly that of scholars conceptualizing hospitality and care for the Other. Through an analysis of Genlis’ Discours sur la suppression des convens and her Discours sur le luxe et l’hospitalité, I demonstrate not only the present-day relevance, but also the surprising radicalness of the texts Genlis published during the revolutionary period.Downloads
Download data is not yet available.

Downloads
Published
2013-09-20
Issue
Section
Articles - thematic dossier
License
All articles published in RELIEF appear in Open Access under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0). Under this licence, authors retain ownership of the copyright of their article, but they allow its unrestricted use, provided it is properly cited.
How to Cite
Bourgault, S. (2013) “Au-delà du moralisme : Madame de Genlis et l’hospitalité”, RELIEF - REVUE ÉLECTRONIQUE DE LITTÉRATURE FRANÇAISE, 7(1), pp. 71–89. doi:10.18352/relief.851.