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Write to Return: Huguenot Refugees on the Frontiers of the French Enlightenment: McGill-Queen's Refugee and Forced Migration Studies Series, cartea 14

Autor Bryan A. Banks
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 iun 2024
The revocation of the Edict of Nantes led more than 200,000 Huguenots to flee France after 1685. Many settled close to the country’s frontiers, where their leaders published apologetic texts arguing for their right to return to France and be recognized as French citizens. By framing their refugee experiences intentionally, even using the term “refugee” to describe their diaspora, Huguenots profoundly influenced Enlightenment debates on citizenship and religious tolerance. Write to Return is a cultural history of these Huguenot apologetics in which Bryan Banks examines the work of four authors: Pierre Jurieu, Pierre Bayle, Antoine Court, and Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Étienne. Each author advanced his arguments using key ideas of the Enlightenment, appealing to reason to argue for freedom of conscience all while appealing to emotion in his descriptions of Huguenot victimhood. The authors’ campaign succeeded. In 1789, France’s revolutionary National Assembly granted repatriation to all expelled Huguenots, offering them citizenship regardless of place of birth or baptism, and even permitting them to reclaim ancestral lands. International refugees played an overlooked role in shaping discourse around the nation and nationalism in the eighteenth century. Write to Return shows how early modern refugees could advocate for their interests, build international networks, and even craft a new collective identity. By presenting themselves as loyal citizens of France, Huguenots were at the forefront of constructing a French national identity.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780228021094
ISBN-10: 022802109X
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: McGill-Queen's University Press
Colecția McGill-Queen's University Press
Seria McGill-Queen's Refugee and Forced Migration Studies Series


Recenzii

"Banks has written a compelling history of the modern emergence of a refugee culture, and especially of how sentimentalism, experience, and empathy figure into it. [A] fascinating and significant study of how Huguenots formulated an identity as refugees and advocated for religious toleration." American Historical Review

"Write to Return is an important work that is relevant not just to French intellectual history but also to an understanding of the making of modern Europe. It should command a wide readership." European Review of History

"Original and convincing. [Banks weaves] the intellectual and human threads between generations of Huguenot thinkers into a thorough and sophisticated study. Banks’s Write to Return offers a major contribution to our understanding of how the Huguenots went from total exclusion from French society to full readmission, not least due to their powerful writings." William and Mary Quarterly

“Banks enriches the field with this interpretation of the Huguenots’ long game. Crisply written, the study provides evidence of the unique experience of the Huguenots who embraced the torment of their involuntary emigration as a divine detour on their journey toward a predetermined destination.” Choice

“Banks’s study deftly links the stories of Protestants in France with those who found refuge in Protestant Europe, demonstrating the continued relevance of the Huguenots to eighteenth-century intellectual life across the continent. Write to Return will be of value not only to specialists on French Protestantism but to anyone interested in French or Enlightenment history.” Owen Stanwood, Boston College

Notă biografică

Bryan A. Banks is associate professor of history at Columbus State University.

Descriere

The revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 led to over 200,000 Huguenots fleeing France. Bryan Banks directs our attention to four authors who advocated for the Huguenots’ right to return. Write to Return shows that by presenting themselves as loyal French subjects, Huguenots were at the forefront of constructing a French national identity.