04028nam 2200637 450 991076551950332120231116171527.00-19-198800-60-19-887682-30-19-887681-510.1093/oso/978018876809.001.0001(MiAaPQ)EBC7285058(Au-PeEL)EBL7285058(OCoLC)1395076712(StDuBDS)9780191988004(EXLCZ)992814133860004120230313d2023 fy| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe early modern Dutch press in an age of religious persecution the making of humanitarianism /David de Boer[electronic resource]Oxford :Oxford University Press,2023.1 online resource (200 pages)Oxford scholarship onlineAlso issued in print: 2023.Print version: de Boer, David The Early Modern Dutch Press in an Age of Religious Persecution Oxford : Oxford University Press, Incorporated,c2023 9780198876809 Includes bibliographical references and index.Intro -- Halftitle page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Dedication page -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Introduction -- The Rise of Print as a Humanitarian Tool -- The Terms of Debate -- A Center of Appeal -- 1. The Paradox of Intervention -- The Poor of Lyon -- Petitioning and Treason -- Public Diplomacy -- International Accountability -- Law -- Religious Persecution -- Inhumanity -- Confessional Animosity -- The Limits of Humanitarian Engagement -- Conclusion -- 2. A Silent Persecution -- Unconditional Loyalty -- The Divided Provinces -- (In)convenient News -- The Voice of the Persecuted -- The Psychology of Persecution -- Conclusion -- 3. Covering a Refugee Crisis -- A Worried Ambassador -- Victims -- Anonymity -- Perpetrators -- Hosts -- Conclusion -- 4. Selling the Last War of Religion -- The Anticipation of Fake News -- Assuming the Voice of the Camisards -- Selling Intervention -- To Hearten and Inspire -- Conclusion -- 5. Between Eschatology and Enlightenment -- The Tumult -- Royal Public Diplomacy -- A Cause Célèbre -- Visions of Religious War -- Irenicism -- Foreign Narratives -- The Last Expulsion -- Conclusion -- Conclusion: Beyond the Confessional Divide -- Solidarity Before Modernity -- Between Word and Deed -- Bibliography -- Index.This text traces the emergence of European humanitarian culture through the seventeenth- and eighteenth-centuries. Drawing on an exceptionally rich body of pamphlets, periodicals, and newspapers, it uncovers how victims of persecution first learned how to employ the printing presses in the Dutch Republic to raise transnational solidarity.Oxford scholarship online.PressNetherlandsHistory17th centuryPressNetherlandsHistory18th centuryReligious minoritiesNetherlandsHistory17th centuryReligious minoritiesNetherlandsHistory18th centuryPersecutionPress coverageNetherlandsHistory17th centuryPersecutionPress coverageNetherlandsHistory18th centuryMedia StudiesukslcMuseology & heritage studiesthemaPressHistoryPressHistoryReligious minoritiesHistoryReligious minoritiesHistoryPersecutionPress coverageHistoryPersecutionPress coverageHistoryMedia Studies.Museology & heritage studies.351.6095Boer David de1990-1450238StDuBDSStDuBDSBOOK9910765519503321The early modern Dutch press in an age of religious persecution3649354UNINA