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1 - Sensational Invasions: The Jesuit, the State and the Family

Charles Kingsley’s Westward Ho! and Wilkie Collins’s The Black Robe

Maureen Moran
Affiliation:
Brunel University
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Summary

What is this alien on British soil?

— R. W. Overbury, The Jesuits

Where is the Jesuit do you say? yea, where is he not? They multiply as maggots in May …

— R. J. M'Ghee, The Poor Gentleman of Liége

‘Jesuitism on the brain’ is a phenomenon not unknown both in our political and religious world … [a] psychological condition in itself.

— John Tulloch, ‘The Order of Jesuits’

In 1880, a priest took the pulpit in St Francis Xavier's Roman Catholic church in Liverpool, looked carefully at the congregation, extended his hand theatrically, and proclaimed three times in a voice rising in sonority: ‘To hell with the Jesuits.’ After a measured pause to ensure maximum impact on the startled parishioners, he continued in a voice of quiet resignation: ‘Such is the cry today.’ This sensational moment can still strike a modern reader, as it electrified Father Tom Burke's listeners, through its shocking juxtaposition of the sacrilegious and the familiar. Like so many nineteenth-century representations of Catholicism, this episode has an uncanny resonance; it disconcerts precisely because it relocates a pervasive social attitude in an unfamiliar space. For his audience, Burke's teasing performance dramatized Catholic identity in Victorian society at large. Whatever the law, adherents of the Church of Rome stood culturally apart, treated as marginal, alien and sinister. And to make this point, Burke drew on a cultural commonplace: the demonization of the Jesuit as the archetype of Catholic strangeness and wickedness.

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Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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