412. Not Matter, But Me: Michel de Montaigne
In his Essays Montaigne uses wit, insight, and humanist training to tackle his favorite subject: Montaigne.
• D.M. Frame (trans.), Michel de Montaigne: the Complete Works (Stanford: 1976).
• M.A. Screech (trans.), Montaigne: the Complete Essays (London: 1993).
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• M. Conche, Montaigne et la philosophie (Paris: 1996).
• P. Desan (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Montaigne (Oxford: 2016).
• P. Desan, Montaigne: a Life (Princeton: 2017).
• D.M. Frame, Montaigne: a Biography (New York: 1984).
• B. Fontana, Montaigne’s Politics: Authority and Governance in the Essays (Geneva: 2008).
• F. Green, Montaigne and the Life of Freedom (Cambridge: 2012).
• G. Hoffmann, Montaigne’s Career (Oxford: 1998).
• U. Langer, The Cambridge Companion to Montaigne (Cambridge: 2005).
• M.A. Screech, Montaigne and Melancholy: the Wisdom of the Essays (London: 1983).
• J. Starobinski, Montaigne in Motion (Chicago: 2009).
• D. Thompson, Montaigne and the Tolerance of Politics (Oxford: 2018).
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Michel de Montaigne

Comments
Just a comment about the…
Just a comment about the prononciation of La Boétie: "La Boessie". Anyway, thanks for this episode!
La Boétie
Yes I actually discovered that after recording this episode! In this case I'm going to go ahead and blame the French language rather than myself, because that is ridiculous, you can't go around spelling things that way.
French pronunciation can be hard...
but there's an English town called Alresford, pronounced "Awls-ford". (Not sure where I came across this trivia. Maybe Kit Patrick's History of India podcast)
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