Limit this search to....

Apostles of Empire: The Jesuits and New France
Contributor(s): McShea, Bronwen (Author)
ISBN: 1496229088     ISBN-13: 9781496229083
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
OUR PRICE:   $28.50  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: January 2022
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | Canada - Pre-confederation (to 1867)
- History | Native American
- History | Europe - France
Dewey: 971.01
Physical Information: 0.84" H x 6" W x 9" (1.21 lbs) 376 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Winner of the 2020 Catholic Press Association Book Award in History

Apostles of Empire is a revisionist history of the French Jesuit mission to Indigenous North Americans in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, offering a comprehensive view of a transatlantic enterprise with integral secular concerns. Between 1611 and 1764, 320 Jesuits were sent from France to North America to serve as missionaries. Most labored in colonial New France, a vast territory comprising eastern Canada and the Great Lakes region, inhabited by diverse Native American populations. Although committed to spreading Catholic doctrines and rituals and adapting them to diverse Indigenous cultures, these missionaries also devoted significant energy to more worldly concerns, particularly the transatlantic expansion of the absolutist-era Bourbon state and the importation of the culture of elite, urban French society.

In Apostles of Empire Bronwen McShea accounts for these secular dimensions of the mission's history through candid portraits of Jesuits engaged in a range of activities. We see them not only preaching and catechizing in terms borrowed from Indigenous idioms but also cultivating trade and military partnerships between the French and various Indian tribes. McShea shows how the Jesuits' robust conceptions of secular spheres of Christian action informed their efforts from both sides of the Atlantic to build up a French and Catholic empire in North America through Indigenous cooperation.