‘Fake News’ in Seventeenth-Century France: The Case of Le Mercure galant

Author(s)Steinberger, Deborah
Date Accessioned2022-12-16T19:15:59Z
Date Available2022-12-16T19:15:59Z
Publication Date2022-10-31
DescriptionThis is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Past & Present following peer review. The version of record Deborah Steinberger, ‘Fake News’ in Seventeenth-Century France: The Case of Le Mercure galant, Past & Present, Volume 257, Issue Supplement_16, November 2022, Pages 143–171, https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtac032 is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtac032. This article will be embargoed until 10/31/2024.
AbstractLe Mercure galant, one of France’s first newspapers, is notable for its diverse content: politics and foreign affairs, court news, science and medicine, the arts and literature. Directed by Jean Donneau de Visé from its inception in 1672 until his death in 1710, this influential and innovative monthly publication circulated throughout France and beyond its borders. The Mercure’s tendency to blur the lines between truth and fiction, between history and propaganda, and between information and entertainment, makes it an instructive case study in early modern ‘fake news’. Donneau de Visé, a self-styled royal historiographer and the beneficiary of a generous royal pension, dedicated his periodical to the Dauphin and published abundant praise of Louis XIV. The Mercure’s news reporting included distortions and propaganda intended to bolster and further entrench the king’s foreign and domestic policies. The Mercure’s nouvelles, short stories presented as true recent events, constituted another type of ‘fake news’, one that often had a different effect, inviting the re-examination of social norms. The nouvelles appealed to the Mercure’s sizeable community of women readers by accentuating female agency and providing a vehicle for the exploration of scenarios of female empowerment.
SponsorResearch for this article was made possible by a General University Research Grant from the University of Delaware. I would like to thank Emma Claussen, Luca Zenobi and Thomas Goodwin for organizing the 2018 conference where we all met, for reading and commenting upon successive drafts of this chapter, and for seeing this project through from beginning to end. I am very grateful as well to Cristina Guardiola-Griffiths, Laura Salsini and Christophe Schuwey for reading this chapter at various stages and offering helpful suggestions. Special thanks go to Gabriel Roy for expert editing.
CitationDeborah Steinberger, ‘Fake News’ in Seventeenth-Century France: The Case of Le Mercure galant, Past & Present, Volume 257, Issue Supplement_16, November 2022, Pages 143–171, https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtac032
ISSN1477-464X
URLhttps://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/31757
Languageen_US
PublisherPast & Present
Title‘Fake News’ in Seventeenth-Century France: The Case of Le Mercure galant
TypeArticle
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