Stephen Cummins
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Jesuit missions and the emotional politics of enmity and peace- making
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This chapter explores the Jesuit peace-making activities in the Kingdom of Naples from the lens of the politics of enmity established in the previous chapters. A crucial part of this mission of ‘extirpation’ was the confrontation of the moral plague of discord and the violence that resulted from enmities. Settling enmities and making peace was one of the regular activities of Jesuit peace-making and central to their understanding of the sacrament of penance. Jesuit missionaries saw themselves converting the hate-filled to peace. Further the vivid and evocative symbols of Jesuit devotion reveal aspects of the emotional politics of enmity. That is, the symbols and discussions of enmity in Jesuit sources, the chapter argues, shed light on the wider significances of enmity in early modern Italy and the post-revolutionary Kingdom of Naples in particular. This chapter draws on the varied accounts of Jesuit peace-making missions in the Jesuit archive in Rome. As well as the written reports of missions, the chapter also uses incoming correspondence from town councils and aristocrats in the kingdom.

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States of Enmity

The politics of hatred in the early modern Kingdom of Naples

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