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Le syncrétisme de Du Bartas

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EN
The works of the humanist Du Bartas has been considered religious, with the aim to present a Calvinist conception of the world conforming to the dogmas. However, the presence of paganism and the effects of dissonances shows that Du Bartas belongs to a spiritual tradition beyond the dogmas. The poet in fact writes in the tradition of Marsil Ficin and his vision of the profane and the sacred is totally in accordance with that of the hermeticist philosophers. Beneath the superficial mean-ing and the topical speech about religious subjects, there lies a much higher truth to be expressed clearly to profanes, those unable to understand the unity of traditions.
EN
In the last years of the 19th century, the Belgian writer Camille Lemonnier published three novels, L'ÎleVierge, Adam et Ève, and Au cœur frais de la forêt, which conveyed the dream of seeing humanity freed from the shackles imposed by society that enslaves men and women and distorts their instincts. The Belgian Georges Eekhoud published in 1912 Les Libertins d'Anvers, which traces the history of Christian heresies in Antwerp from the 12th century until their repression by the Protestant reform and the Catholic counter-reform. Inspired by the same identity concerns, Lemonnier and Eekhoud offer models of utopian communities that draw inspiration from both paganism and Christian evangelism. The two writers praise charity, and respect for others and for nature. However, they differ in the interest they place in the couple and the family as a social foundation, Lemonnier applying the lessons of naturism, while Eekhoud is more in line with anarchist thinkers such as Charles Fourier, Raoul Vaneigem and Michel Onfray.
FR
Dans les dernières années du XIXe siècle, l’écrivain belge Camille Lemonnier publie trois romans, L’Île vierge, Adam et Ève, et Au cœur frais de la forêt, qui véhiculent le rêve de voir l’humanité libérée du carcan imposé par une société qui asservit l’homme et la femme et dénature leur instinct. Le Belge Georges Eekhoud publie en 1912 Les Libertins d’Anvers, qui retrace l’histoire des hérésies chrétiennes à Anvers du XIIe siècle jusqu’à leur répression par la Réforme protestante et la Contre-réforme. Nourris par les mêmes préoccupations identitaires, Lemonnier et Eekhoud proposent des modèles de communautés utopiques qui s’inspirent à la fois du paganisme et de l’évangélisme chrétien. Les deux écrivains font l’apologie de la charité et du respect du prochain et de la nature. Toutefois, ils diffèrent dans l’intérêt qu’ils accordent au couple et à la famille comme fondement social, Lemonnier appliquant les leçons du naturisme, tandis qu’Eekhoud se situe davantage dans un courant de la pensée anarchiste représenté notamment par Charles Fourier, Raoul Vaneigem et Michel Onfray.
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