[en] Focused on the Catholic League, a pivotal episode in the French Wars of Religion in the 16th century, this article explores how transparency was strategically employed in a series of libels—short polemical texts commenting on contemporary events. The analysis unfolds in three stages. First, it examines how the absence of transparency enabled polemicists to construct an accusation against King Henry III. Second, it highlights how the libels also denounced a more pervasive lack of transparency. Finally, the third section investigates the strategic and discursive advantages these accusations conferred both on the League as a faction and on its libelles as socio-political actors.
Research Center/Unit :
Transitions - Transitions - Unité de recherches sur le Moyen Âge et la première Modernité - ULiège
Disciplines :
History Communication & mass media
Author, co-author :
Goderniaux, Alexandre ; Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences historiques > Histoire moderne
Language :
English
Title :
The Truth behind the Mask. Unveiling King Henry III and False Catholics through Polemic Printed Texts (France, 1589)
Publication date :
2025
Journal title :
Symploke
ISSN :
1069-0697
eISSN :
1534-0627
Publisher :
University of Nebraska Press, United States - Nebraska