Reviews
"A welcome addition to the small but growing body of scholarly work that examines the French Protestant experience from an Atlantic world perspective."
—Journal of American History
"Provid[es] important insights into the cultural transformations involved in the creation of a New World society. Her book contributes to the literature of colonial history, transatlantic history, and the cultural world of early America."
"The book's grand sweep is appealing. It has an elegant thesis, one possessed of enormous potential. Succinctly put, the cataclysmic violence and prophetic outpourings that attended the proscription and persecution of Protestants in late-seventeenth and early-eighteenth-century France reverberated profoundly in colonial America. Accordingly, the close examination of key Camisard figures and their trans-Atlantic influence provides a better, more precise sense of both French and American religious traditions."
—Register of the Kentucky Historical Society
"Randall's work remains an essential read for anyone planning to study the Huguenots or Camisards, especially in an Atlantic context. Her research has clearly opened up a debate which should have come to light sooner; that the impact of immigration on a society does not stop at those immigrants who isolate themselves in immigrant communities, but is far more wide reaching."
—Christopher S Adams, Wesley Historical Society
Description
The Camisard religion was marked by more ecstatic expression than that of the Huguenots, not unlike differences between Pentecostals and Protestants. Both groups were persecuted and emigrated in large numbers, becoming participants in the broad circulation of ideas that characterized the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Atlantic world. Randall vividly portrays this French Protestant diaspora through the lives of three figures: Gabriel Bernon, who led a Huguenot exodus to Massachusetts and moved among the commercial elite; Ezéchiel Carré, a Camisard who influenced Cotton Mather’s theology; and Elie Neau, a Camisard-influenced writer and escaped galley slave who established North America’s first school for blacks.
Like other French Protestants, these men were adaptable in their religious views, a quality Randall points out as quintessentially American. In anthropological terms they acted as code shifters who manipulated multiple cultures. While this malleability ensured that French Protestant culture would not survive in externally recognizable terms in the Americas, Randall shows that the culture’s impact was nonetheless considerable.
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| Paper List price: $24.95 9780820338200 3/1/2011 |