Young Subjects

Children, State-Building, and Social Reform in the Eighteenth-Century French World

By Julia M. Gossard
Categories: World History, Family Studies, Gender & Sexuality Studies
Series: States, People, and the History of Social Change
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780228005650, 272 pages, March 2021
Ebook (PDF) : 9780228006893, March 2021
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780228006909, March 2021

An exploration of children's engagement in state-building and social reform in eighteenth-century France and its empire.

Description

Across the metropole, the colonies, and the wider eighteenth-century world, French children and youth participated in a diverse set of state-building initiatives, social reform programs, and imperial expansion efforts. Young Subjects explores the lives and experiences of these youth, revealing their role as active and vital agents in the shaping of early modern France.

Through a set of regional case studies, Julia Gossard demonstrates how thousands of children and youth were engaged in the service of the state. In Lyon, charity schools cultivated children as agents of moral and social reform who carried their lessons home to their families. In Paris, orphaned and imprisoned youth trained in skilled trades or prepared for military service, while others were sent to the French colonies in North America as filles du roi and sturdy labourers. Young people from merchant families were recruited to serve as cultural brokers and translators on behalf of French commerical interests in the Ottoman Empire and Siam. In each case, Gossard considers how these youth played, negotiated, and sometimes resisted their roles, and what expressions of individual identity and agency were available to subjects under the legal control of others.

As sources of labour, future taxpayers, colonial subjects, cultural mediators, and potential criminals, children and youth were objects of intense interest for civic authorities. Young Subjects refocuses our attention on these often overlooked historical subjects who helped to build France.

Reviews

Young Subjects details the daily lives of children with rare richness. This is a very impressive piece of scholarship that shows how indispensable the history of childhood is to understanding France, its empire, and the early modern state.” Bianca Premo, Florida International University and author of Children of the Father King: Youth, Authority, and Legal Minority in Colonial Lima