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BLASPHEMY Impious Speech in the West from the Seventeenth to the Nineteenth Century

Author: Alain Cabantous

Translated by Eric Rauth

Publisher/Date: Columbia University Press (2002 1st US)

Format/Condition: New hardcover is in fine condition. Dust jacket is near fine: light edgewear. 288 pages including index; measures appox 6 × 9”

Description: Our world is steeped in attitudes and concepts derived from a sacred worldview, and this book helps us understand why. Alain Cabantous shows that blasphemy is a battlefield where religious dogma and secular rule clash, with their respective agents (the priest and the judge) competing for the proper reaction to a variety of curses.

The book takes us on a journey through the Christian West with braggarts, craftsmen, soldiers, sailors, and their coarse, forbidden exchanges. More than simply an exhaustive inventory of the uses of and bans on blasphemy, the book is a lively analysis of the relationship between the blasphemer, the machinery of language, and that of repression.

Beginning with a review of acts and crimes of blasphemy in biblical times, including the second commandment’s injunction against taking God’s name in vain, Cabantous reviews the close relationship between religious authority and royal authority in the sixteenth century, when the king ruled by divine right and attacks against God were implicit attacks on the nature of kingship. Punishing blasphemy was a way for the king to rule as God´s representative and an occasion for the church to take control of language. The narrative continues with an exploration of acts of blasphemy, as well as related acts of desecration and profanation, which were regarded as civil and religious offenses up to the French Revolution of 1789 and afterward. The book then explores blasphemy through the mid-nineteenth century, when Catholic opponents of the French Revolution claimed that revolution itself was a blasphemy and a profanation.

The reason Cabantous (modern history, U. of Paris-Panthéon- Sorbonne) first encountered incidents of blasphemy while studying sailors was not necessarily because they were so much better at it, but because the regulations against it were so strict that cases rose often. He maintained his interest after he wandered away from the docks, and here explores blasphemers in their relation to the official machinery of enunciation and repression. The original Histoire du blasphème en Occident: Fin XVIe-milieu XIXe siècle was published by Éditions Albin Michel, Paris in 1998. This book is part of the European Perspectives series.