Sermonic Performance as Cultural Protest in New France

Authors

  • Joy Palacios University of Calgary

Abstract

This article analyzes the antitheatrical sermons produced under the bishop of Québec, Jean-Baptiste de la Croix de Chevrières de Saint-Vallier, in response to a rumored performance of Molière’s Tartuffe in 1694. It makes the case that the performance of these sermons constituted a form of cultural protest in an early modern sense in that Saint-Vallier saw himself as a defender of the ideal social and religious order he envisioned for New France and drew on the same conservative tropes common to
agents of pre-Revolutionary social unrest. Although France already had a long antitheatrical tradition by the end of the seventeenth century, theatrical performance proved particularly contentious in New France given that the colony lacked a printing press, making performance an essential medium for the transmission of information, or publication. Publication, the article argues, is also a useful way to understand the imperative to make devotion manifest or visible in Counter-Reformation Catholicism,
which the sermons present plays as disrupting. The article concludes that as cultural protest, the sermons succeeded. They helped suppress theatrical activity in New France for more than a century. However, when evaluated in relation to Saint-Vallier’s spiritual objectives, his sermonic protests against the theater failed. By emphasizing the outer forms of devotion, Saint-Vallier turned theatricality into the enemy within.

Author Biography

Joy Palacios, University of Calgary

Joy Palacios is an assistant professor of religious studies in the Department of Classics and Religion at the University of Calgary. She holds a Ph.D. in Performance Studies from the University of California, Berkeley and her research interests concern the religious practice, culture, and literature of the French Counter-Reformation, with particular attention to the tensions between the church and the theater. Her current book project examines the link between the reform of Catholic worship through seminary education during the 17th and early 18th centuries and the rise of clerical animosity toward actors in early modern France. She has published in Liminalities, Performance Matters, and Past and Present, as well as in a number of edited collections.

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Published

2017-12-12