eprintid: 1419906
rev_number: 25
eprint_status: archive
userid: 608
dir: disk0/01/41/99/06
datestamp: 2014-02-27 19:56:19
lastmod: 2020-06-14 08:06:07
status_changed: 2014-02-27 19:56:19
type: article
metadata_visibility: show
item_issues_count: 0
creators_name: Ibbett, K
title: Being Moved: Louis XIV’s Triumphant Tenderness and the Protestant Object
ispublished: pub
divisions: UCL
divisions: A01
divisions: B03
divisions: C01
keywords: Protestant, Revocation, Louis XIV, object, coral, diamond, affect, Triomphe de la Religion
note: © W. S. Maney & Son Ltd 2014. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
abstract: This essay examines the place of affect in Le Triomphe de la Religion, a text from 1687 that praises Louis XIV for the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes and the forced conversion of French Protestants. It explores the role of the material object in this text and contrasts it with seventeenth-century Protestant fears about the seductive power of Catholic objects. Drawing on the work of affect theory, it suggest how attention to the strange relation between emotion and the material object might better illuminate our sense of what it meant to be religiously different in absolutist France.
date: 2014-01
official_url: http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/1041257313Z.00000000041
vfaculties: VARTS
oa_status: green
full_text_type: pub
primo: open
primo_central: open_green
verified: verified_manual
elements_source: crossref
elements_id: 931506
doi: 10.1179/1041257313Z.00000000041
language_elements: aa
lyricists_name: Ibbett, Katherine
lyricists_id: KIBBE20
full_text_status: public
publication: Exemplaria
volume: 26
number: 1
pagerange: 16 - 38
issn: 1041-2573
citation:        Ibbett, K;      (2014)    Being Moved: Louis XIV’s Triumphant Tenderness and the Protestant Object.                   Exemplaria , 26  (1)   16 - 38.    10.1179/1041257313Z.00000000041 <https://doi.org/10.1179/1041257313Z.00000000041>.       Green open access   
 
document_url: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1419906/1/1041257313Z.00000000041-1.pdf