A Montaigne for now
Starting from the premise of the "textual mobility" of classical works, this review first outlines the extraordinary adaptability of Michel de Montaigne's Essays in modernity and the present day, drawing on interpretations by Michel Foucault, Antoine Compagnon, Tiphaine Samoyault, and current political appropriations. Against this backdrop, the edited volume "The International Reception of Michel de Montaigne's Essays: Forms, Interpretations, Conjunctures" (De Gruyter, 2026), edited by Olav Krämer, Andrea Grewe, and Susanne Schlünder, is presented, as it systematically documents this responsiveness for the first time from an international perspective. The review focuses particularly on those contributions that examine the reception of Montaigne in the 19th and 20th centuries, as well as in contemporary philosophical and political discourses—for example, the studies on Flaubert, Nietzsche, Derrida, and the political instrumentalization of the skeptic. Thus, the volume appears less as a comprehensive overview than as a rich source of material for a history of modern appropriations of Montaigne, which confirms the thesis developed at the outset: The authority of the Essays does not rest on a fixed original text, but on its continuous variation, translation and ideological reinterpretation.
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