Description

Book Synopsis
French Huguenots were colonial New York City's most successful artisans, turning out unrivaled works of furniture that were distinguished by unique designs and arcane details.

Trade Review
Well-researched tome that is 'the story of a subterranean culture on the move, its membership fragmented by chronic warfare, exclusion, and political instability and actively in search of new modes of security.' Maine Antique Digest 2005 Imaginative and innovative treatment of the French Reformation. Renaissance Quarterly 2006 This lavish volume presents a wide-ranging and complex reading of its rather amorphous subject. -- Carla Gardina Pestana Journal of American History 2006 Fortress of the Soul demands deep respect from its readers... quite evidently the product of decades of scholarly labor. -- Glenn Adamson Studies in the Decorative Arts 2007 Ambitious in its goals, complex in its interpretation and methodology, and groundbreaking in its approach. -- Gayle K. Brunelle Itinerario: European Journal of Overseas History 2006 Fortress of the Soul... opens up prospects for new directions in early American scholarship. -- Mark A. Peterson William and Mary Quarterly 2007 Throughout, the Fortress of the Soul displays considerable erudition and substantial energy. -- Raymond A. Mentzer Sixteenth Century Journal 2007 It is clear that this study will be a landmark study, a monument in the intellectual and material history of the early modern Atlantic world. -- John L. Brooke Winterthur Portfolio 2007 Kamil's innovative historical monograph richly deserves to be described as interdisciplinary. Journal of Interdisciplinary History 2007 A monumental work on a number of levels. -- Mary Henninger-Voss Technology and Culture 2007 A brilliant, controversial book, full of fireworks, some real Huguenot rockets, and some metaphysical damp squibs. -- Mark Greengrass Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of Great Britain & Ireland 2006

Table of Contents

List of Figures and Maps
Preface
Introduction
Part I: The Art of the Earth
Chapter 1. A Risky Gift: The Entrance of Charles IX into La Rochelle in 1565
Chapter 2. Palissy's Fortress: The Construction of Artisanal Security
Chapter 3. Personal History and "Spiritual Honor": Philibert Hamelin's Consideration of Straight Lines and the Rehabilitation of the Nicodemite as Huguenot Artisan of Security
Chapter 4. War and Sûreté: The Context of Artisanal Enthusiasm in Aunis-Saintonge
Chapter 5. Scenes of Reading: Rustic Artisans and the Diffusion of Paracelsian Discourses to New Worlds
Chapter 6. American Rustic Scenes: Bernard Palissy, John Winthrop the Younger, and Benjamin Franklin
Chapter 7. The River and Nebuchadnezzar's Dream: War, Separation, "the Sound," and the Materiality of Time
Chapter 8. The Art of the Earth
Part II: The Fragmentation of the Body
Chapter 9. "In Patientia Sauvitas," or, The Invisible Fortress Departs
Chapter 10. Being "at the Île of Rue": Science, Secrecy, and Security at the Siege of La Rochelle, 1627–1635
Chapter 11. The Geography of "Your Native Country": Relocation of Spatial Identity to the New World, 1628–1787
Chapter 12. La Rochelle's Transatlantic Body: The Commons Debates of 1628
Chapter 13. "Fraudulent father-Frenchmen": The Huguenot Counterfeit and the Threat to England's Internal Security
Chapter 14. "The destruction that wasteth at noonday": Hogarth's Hog Lane and the Huguenot Fortress of Memory
Part III: The Secrets of the Craft
Chapter 15. Hidden in Plain Sight: Disappearance and Material Life in Colonial New York
Chapter 16. Fragments of Huguenot-Quaker Convergence in New York: Little Histories (Avignon, France, 1601–1602; Flushing, Long Island, 1657–1726)
Chapter 17. Reflections on a Three-Legged Chair: Sundials, "Family Pieces," and Political Culture in Pre-Revolutionary New York
Notes
Index

Fortress of the Soul

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    A Hardback by Neil Kamil

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      View other formats and editions of Fortress of the Soul by Neil Kamil

      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 08/04/2005
      ISBN13: 9780801873904, 978-0801873904
      ISBN10: 0801873908

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      French Huguenots were colonial New York City's most successful artisans, turning out unrivaled works of furniture that were distinguished by unique designs and arcane details.

      Trade Review
      Well-researched tome that is 'the story of a subterranean culture on the move, its membership fragmented by chronic warfare, exclusion, and political instability and actively in search of new modes of security.' Maine Antique Digest 2005 Imaginative and innovative treatment of the French Reformation. Renaissance Quarterly 2006 This lavish volume presents a wide-ranging and complex reading of its rather amorphous subject. -- Carla Gardina Pestana Journal of American History 2006 Fortress of the Soul demands deep respect from its readers... quite evidently the product of decades of scholarly labor. -- Glenn Adamson Studies in the Decorative Arts 2007 Ambitious in its goals, complex in its interpretation and methodology, and groundbreaking in its approach. -- Gayle K. Brunelle Itinerario: European Journal of Overseas History 2006 Fortress of the Soul... opens up prospects for new directions in early American scholarship. -- Mark A. Peterson William and Mary Quarterly 2007 Throughout, the Fortress of the Soul displays considerable erudition and substantial energy. -- Raymond A. Mentzer Sixteenth Century Journal 2007 It is clear that this study will be a landmark study, a monument in the intellectual and material history of the early modern Atlantic world. -- John L. Brooke Winterthur Portfolio 2007 Kamil's innovative historical monograph richly deserves to be described as interdisciplinary. Journal of Interdisciplinary History 2007 A monumental work on a number of levels. -- Mary Henninger-Voss Technology and Culture 2007 A brilliant, controversial book, full of fireworks, some real Huguenot rockets, and some metaphysical damp squibs. -- Mark Greengrass Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of Great Britain & Ireland 2006

      Table of Contents

      List of Figures and Maps
      Preface
      Introduction
      Part I: The Art of the Earth
      Chapter 1. A Risky Gift: The Entrance of Charles IX into La Rochelle in 1565
      Chapter 2. Palissy's Fortress: The Construction of Artisanal Security
      Chapter 3. Personal History and "Spiritual Honor": Philibert Hamelin's Consideration of Straight Lines and the Rehabilitation of the Nicodemite as Huguenot Artisan of Security
      Chapter 4. War and Sûreté: The Context of Artisanal Enthusiasm in Aunis-Saintonge
      Chapter 5. Scenes of Reading: Rustic Artisans and the Diffusion of Paracelsian Discourses to New Worlds
      Chapter 6. American Rustic Scenes: Bernard Palissy, John Winthrop the Younger, and Benjamin Franklin
      Chapter 7. The River and Nebuchadnezzar's Dream: War, Separation, "the Sound," and the Materiality of Time
      Chapter 8. The Art of the Earth
      Part II: The Fragmentation of the Body
      Chapter 9. "In Patientia Sauvitas," or, The Invisible Fortress Departs
      Chapter 10. Being "at the Île of Rue": Science, Secrecy, and Security at the Siege of La Rochelle, 1627–1635
      Chapter 11. The Geography of "Your Native Country": Relocation of Spatial Identity to the New World, 1628–1787
      Chapter 12. La Rochelle's Transatlantic Body: The Commons Debates of 1628
      Chapter 13. "Fraudulent father-Frenchmen": The Huguenot Counterfeit and the Threat to England's Internal Security
      Chapter 14. "The destruction that wasteth at noonday": Hogarth's Hog Lane and the Huguenot Fortress of Memory
      Part III: The Secrets of the Craft
      Chapter 15. Hidden in Plain Sight: Disappearance and Material Life in Colonial New York
      Chapter 16. Fragments of Huguenot-Quaker Convergence in New York: Little Histories (Avignon, France, 1601–1602; Flushing, Long Island, 1657–1726)
      Chapter 17. Reflections on a Three-Legged Chair: Sundials, "Family Pieces," and Political Culture in Pre-Revolutionary New York
      Notes
      Index

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