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Books > History > World history > 1750 to 1900
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Civilizing Habits - Women Missionaries and the Revival of French Empire (Hardcover)
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Civilizing Habits - Women Missionaries and the Revival of French Empire (Hardcover)
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Civilizing Habits explores the life stories of three French women
missionaries - Philippine Duchesne, Emilie de Vialar, and
Anne-Marie Javouhey - who transgressed boundaries, both real and
imagined, to evangelize far from France's shores. In so doing, this
book argues that they helped France reestablish a global empire
after the dislocation of the Revolution and the fall of Napoleon.
They also pioneered a new missionary era in which the educational,
charity, and health care services provided by women became valuable
tools for spreading Catholic influence across the globe. Philippine
Duchesne, who began her religious life in a cloistered convent
before the Revolution, traveled to former French territory in
Missouri in 1818 to proselytize among Native American tribes.
Thwarted by the American policy of removing tribes even further
west, her main legacy became girls' education on the frontier.
Emilie de Vialar followed French troops to Algeria after conquest
in 1830 and opened missions throughout the Mediterranean basin.
Prevented from direct conversion, she developed strategies and
subterfuges for working among Muslim populations. Anne-Marie
Javouhey made her life's work the evangelization of Africans in the
French slave colonies, including a utopian settlement in the wilds
of French Guiana. She became a rare Catholic proponent of the
abolition of slavery and a woman designated a "great man " by the
French king. Freed from physical enclosure, these women were
protected from worldly corruption only by their religious habits
and their behavior. Paradoxically, however, through embracing
religious institutions designed to shield their femininity, these
women gained increased authority to travel outside of France,
challenge church power, and evangelize among non-Christians, all
roles more commonly ascribed to male missionaries. Their stories
teach us about the life paths open to religious women in the
nineteenth century and how both church and state benefitted from
their initiative and energy to expand boundaries of faith and
nation.
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