Early Popular Visual Culture | 2019

Fighting the enemy with the lantern: how French and Belgian Catholic priests lectured against their common laic enemies before 1914

 
 

Abstract


ABSTRACT Around 1900, French and Belgian Catholics adopted the projection lantern as a means of education and propaganda in reaction to successful initiatives of this kind by secularist organisations. In the north of France, near the Belgian border, the dioceses of Arras and Cambrai founded the Œuvre des Conférences et Catéchismes in Robaix, which provided a projection service distributing slides and lanterns. Belgian Catholics followed that example and cooperated in several ways with their French neighbours. This article describes the emergence and organisation of these projection services and their distribution practices. It also looks at the Catholics’ efforts to fight the Freemasons, who were considered the worst enemies of the Church. Finally, several slides from the Robert Vrielynck collection in Antwerp will be discussed, which bear witness to the propaganda strategies used by the Catholic Church.

Volume 17
Pages 111 - 89
DOI 10.1080/17460654.2019.1641971
Language English
Journal Early Popular Visual Culture

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