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Continuous professional development: An overview from English language teachers in east Kalimantan
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In: Journal of Applied Linguistics and Literature, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 51-62 (2022) (2022)
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Generalizability of Writing Scores and Language Program Placement Decisions: Score Dependability, Task Variability, and Score Profiles on an ESL Placement Test
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In: Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL, Vol 21, Iss 2 (2022) (2022)
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Males and females’ complimenting behaviour on the celebrities’ Instagram comments
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In: Journal of Applied Linguistics and Literature, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 76-103 (2022) (2022)
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Automatic Detection of Plagiarism in Writing
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In: Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL, Vol 21, Iss 2 (2022) (2022)
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Readers' Credits for Volume 21, Issue 2
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In: Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL, Vol 21, Iss 2 (2022) (2022)
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The Justificative Discourse of Louis de Condé during the Second and Third Wars of Religion (1567-1568)
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In: Argumentum: Journal of the Seminar of Discursive Logic, Argumentation Theory and Rhetoric, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 33-58 (2022) (2022)
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Abstract:
The French Wars of Religion (1562-1598) posed the biggest threat to the French Monarchy since the darkest days of the Hundred Years War. Not only that the royal authority had, in practical terms, reached its lowest ebb since in more than a hundred and fifty years, but the factions involved, both Catholic and Protestant, developed theories of resistance which advocated for popular sovereignty and the right to depose (and, in some cases, even kill) tyrannical kings. Yet, this radicalism came from the lower ranks of the belligerent factions and was not shared by their leadership, who was more careful to safeguard the prestige of the monarchy. This is most true for the Huguenots princes and their allies, who constantly refused to openly name the king as their enemy, regardless of how much their relationship with the Crown had degraded. At the beginning of the wars, the most prominent political personality amongst the Huguenots, Louis, prince of Condé, insisted, through an extensive campaign of propaganda, that the Protestant rebellion was aiming to actually protect the (underage) king, Charles IX, against a coterie of Catholic aristocrats who was keeping him prisoner and to restore the overall peace and justice of the kingdom, with more specifically Protestant grievances being pushed into the background. But, at the start of the second war of religion, in 1567, the tone of Condé’s propaganda started to gradually change, his justificative texts speaking instead of a “moral captivity” of a king instead of him being a physical prisoner and taking a more confessionalized approach, focused on the interests of the Huguenot movement. This paper aims to trace this shift and describe the new kind of discourse employed in Condé’s texts, while explaining the possible reasons why this change occurred.
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Keyword:
france; huguenots; Language and Literature; Language. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammar; Oral communication. Speech; P; P101-410; P95-95.6; sixteenth century; wars of religion
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URL: https://doaj.org/article/dde2f0dc654b4b63ba8a668913ed4ead
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