Table of Contents
Part 1: Belonging and Displacement, Chapter 1: Emotion, Exclusion, Exile: The Huguenot Experience during the French Religious Wars; Chapter 2: Cross-Channel Affections: Pressure and Persuasion in Letters to Calvinist Refugees in England, 1569–1570; Chapter 3: A Tearful Diaspora: Preaching Religious Emotions in the Huguenot Refuge; Chapter 4: Between Hope and Despair: Epistolary Evidence of the Emotional Effects of Persecution and Exile during the Thirty Years War; Part 2 Coping with Persecution and Exile, Chapter 5: The Embodiment of Exile: Relics and Suffering in Early Modern English Cloisters; Chapter 6: Fear and Loathing in the Radical Reformation: David Joris as the Prophet of Emotional Tranquillity, 1525–1556; Chapter 7: ‘I am contented to die’: The Letters from Prison of the Waldensian Sebastian Bazan (d. 1623) and the Anti-Jacobite Narratives of the Reformed Martyrs of Piedmont, Chapter 8: Seventeenth-Century Quakers, Emotions and Egalitarianism: Sufferings, Oppression, Intolerance and Slavery; Chapter 9: She Suffered for Christ Jesus’ Sake: The Scottish Covenanters’ Emotional Strategies to Combat Religious Persecution (1685–1714); Part 3: "Othering" Strategies, Chapter 10: Feeling Jewish: Emotions, Identity, and the Jews’ Inverted Christmas; Chapter 11: Towards an Alien Community of Dancing Witches in Early Seventeenth-Century Europe; Chapter 12: Visual Provocations: Bernard Picart’s Illustrative Strategies in Cérémonies et coutumes religieuses de tous les peuples du monde; Chapter 13: Feeling Upside Down: Witchcraft and Exclusion in the Twilight of Early Modern Spain; Afterword: Emotional Communities and the Early Modern Religious Exile Experience