Du baptême à la tombe [electronic resource] : afro-catholicisme et réseaux familiaux dans les communautés esclaves louisianaises (1803-1845) / Geneviève Piché ; préface de Paul Lachance.

"This [publication] aims to reconstruct the history and the evolution of Afro-Catholicism in Louisiana in the early nineteenth century, both in urban areas, with the city of New Orleans as a backdrop, and rural areas, with the parish of St. John the Baptist as a case study. It begins in 1803, when L...

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Bibliographic Details
Uniform Title:Collection Des Amériques (Rennes, France) 2265-6537
Main Author: Piché, Geneviève (Author)
Other Authors: Lachance, Paul (Writer of preface)
Language:French
Published: Rennes : Presses universitaires de Rennes, [2018]
Series:Collection Des Amériques (Rennes, France)
Subjects:
Online Access:
Variant Title:
Du baptême à la tombe : Afro-catholicisme et réseaux familiaux dans les communautés esclaves Louisianaises (1803-1845)
Format: Electronic eBook
Description
Summary:
"This [publication] aims to reconstruct the history and the evolution of Afro-Catholicism in Louisiana in the early nineteenth century, both in urban areas, with the city of New Orleans as a backdrop, and rural areas, with the parish of St. John the Baptist as a case study. It begins in 1803, when Louisiana became an American possession, and ends in 1845, three years after the founding in New Orleans of the St. Augustine Church, the emblem of the religion of free blacks and slaves, and of the Sisters of the Holy Family, a religious order for free women of color. Early nineteenth-century Louisiana is the perfect theater to explore the encounter between Catholicism and slavery and to perceive the construction process of a distinct Afro-Catholicism. Although many studies focus on the history of slavery in Louisiana, the world of the slaves and of their religious practices is still largely elusive. Exploring the religious culture of the slaves in the American South represents a historiographical challenge that help refine our knowledge of a troubled time in American history - the era of slavery-, of largely unknown actors- Catholic slaves -, and of an area totally different from the rest of the United States. In fact, because of its Franco-Hispanic roots and its Catholic character, Louisiana appears as a single entity within the United States of America, predominantly Anglo-Protestant."--Abstract for original thesis.
Note:Revision of the author's thesis (doctoral)--Université de Sherbrooke and Université Toulouse-Jean Jaurès, 2015, titled: À la rencontre de deux mondes : les esclaves de Louisiane et l'Église catholique, 1803-1845.
Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references (pages 255-274) and index.
ISBN:9782753578623 (online)
ISSN:2265-6537