This article explores how The Fable of the Bees was received in France, and provides a broad outline of its influence on the philosophers of the French Enlightenment. Reference to Bernard Mandeville's work in French periodicals (between 1720 and 1750), together with a series of disapproving critiques that appeared after the French translation of the Fable, indicate keen interest in this author on the part of French intellectuals. Mandeville's reputation both on the Continent and in England as an immoral philosopher and champion of paradoxical theses, had earned him a degree of fame in France even before the publication of the French translation of the Fable in 1740. Even if considerably closer to the original than the unpublished translatio...
This article examines the separate journeys to France of Hester Thrale (1741-1821) and Elizabeth Mon...
This book brings together new studies on the thought of Bernard de Mandeville. The chapters reflect ...
This article tracks the reputation of Guillaume de Saluste Du Bartas's Semaines (1578, 1584 et seq.)...
In about 1735, Emilie Du Châtelet began to translate Mandeville's Fable of the Bees. Her work, which...
The Fable of the bees and the Treatise of human nature were written to define and dissect the essent...
The thesis takes Mandeville's medical works at Leiden as a starting point. Translations of his first...
The essay examines the diachronic use of beehive-images as iconic political metaphors and their rela...
This article analyses how Mandeville’s Treatise of the hypochodriack and hysterick passions (1711) w...
Bernard Mandeville’s Fable of the Bees was received with shock in eighteenth-century English society...
Today remembered primarily as an eighteenth-century predecessor of laissez-faire economics, Bernard ...
This study examines a relatively unacknowledged feature of Bernard Mandeville's writing - his discus...
Mandeville’s first publication – the thesis Disputatio Philosophica de Brutorum Operationibus (168...
This article examines when and how the ‘Defective’ version of the Book of Sir John Mandeville came t...
In the eighteenth century, the Dutch-born satirist Bernard Mandeville was generally associated with ...
Of the short pieces Herman Melville wrote between 1853 and 1856, while trying his chances as a short...
This article examines the separate journeys to France of Hester Thrale (1741-1821) and Elizabeth Mon...
This book brings together new studies on the thought of Bernard de Mandeville. The chapters reflect ...
This article tracks the reputation of Guillaume de Saluste Du Bartas's Semaines (1578, 1584 et seq.)...
In about 1735, Emilie Du Châtelet began to translate Mandeville's Fable of the Bees. Her work, which...
The Fable of the bees and the Treatise of human nature were written to define and dissect the essent...
The thesis takes Mandeville's medical works at Leiden as a starting point. Translations of his first...
The essay examines the diachronic use of beehive-images as iconic political metaphors and their rela...
This article analyses how Mandeville’s Treatise of the hypochodriack and hysterick passions (1711) w...
Bernard Mandeville’s Fable of the Bees was received with shock in eighteenth-century English society...
Today remembered primarily as an eighteenth-century predecessor of laissez-faire economics, Bernard ...
This study examines a relatively unacknowledged feature of Bernard Mandeville's writing - his discus...
Mandeville’s first publication – the thesis Disputatio Philosophica de Brutorum Operationibus (168...
This article examines when and how the ‘Defective’ version of the Book of Sir John Mandeville came t...
In the eighteenth century, the Dutch-born satirist Bernard Mandeville was generally associated with ...
Of the short pieces Herman Melville wrote between 1853 and 1856, while trying his chances as a short...
This article examines the separate journeys to France of Hester Thrale (1741-1821) and Elizabeth Mon...
This book brings together new studies on the thought of Bernard de Mandeville. The chapters reflect ...
This article tracks the reputation of Guillaume de Saluste Du Bartas's Semaines (1578, 1584 et seq.)...