Religions (Oct 2012)

The Confessions of Montaigne

  • John Jeffries Martin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3040950
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 4
pp. 950 – 963

Abstract

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Montaigne rarely repented and he viewed confession—both juridical and ecclesiastical—with skepticism. Confession, Montaigne believed, forced a mode of self-representation onto the speaker that was inevitably distorting. Repentance, moreover, made claims about self-transformation that Montaigne found improbable. This article traces these themes in the context of Montaigne’s Essays, with particular attention to “On Some Verses of Virgil” and argues that, for Montaigne, a primary concern was finding a means of describing a self that he refused to reduce, as had Augustine and many other writers before and after him, to the homo interior.

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