From diaspora to “imagined minority”. Memories of persecution and the cross-generational transformation of Protestant migrant networks in early modern Europe
Most early modern religious diaspora groups in Europe cultivated narratives of persecution and martyrdom and handed them on to future generations. Yet the function of such narratives changed in each migrant generation. Focusing on printed publications of Netherlandish exile communities in Germany an...
Main Author: | Johannes Müller |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Presses Universitaires du Midi
2018-08-01
|
Series: | Diasporas: Circulations, Migrations, Histoire |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journals.openedition.org/diasporas/972 |
Similar Items
-
Roamin’ Holiday: Protestants on Foot in the Eternal City
by: Emily Michelson
Published: (2023-05-01) -
Urban and rural articulations of an early modern bourgeois civilizing process and its discontents
by: Ulrich Ufer
Published: (2011-01-01) -
Review of Women and Liberty, 1600-1800 by Jacqueline Broad and Karen Detlefsen (eds.)
by: Patricia Sheridan
Published: (2018-07-01) -
Self-referential rhetoric: the evolution of the Elizabethan 'wit'
by: Kramer, Y
Published: (2017) -
Memory, Imagination, Identity: Pilgrimage and Portraiture in Medieval and Early Modern Europe
by: Helena Guzik
Published: (2021-07-01)