- Christian Renoux
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Christian Renoux is a French historian and an activist for nonviolence.
Contents
Education and teaching
Born in 1960, he is alumnus of the École normale supérieure de Fontenay-Saint-Cloud (1982), agrégé in History (1984), alumnus of the Ecole française de Rome, the French Historical Institute of Rome (1992-1995), doctor in Early modern History of the Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne University (1996) and graduated in Catholic theology from the Marc Bloch University of Strasbourg.
Since 1998, he has been associate professor of Early modern History at the University of Orléans (France), where is also teaching the History of Religions and the History of Nonviolence.
Research
His research work is about the history of canonization and of sainthood in the Early Modern Times and about the history of Female Mystics in the 17th century. He is also interested in the history of demoniacal possession in the same period.
He published an history of the Peace Prayer attributed to saint Francis of Assisi ("Lord, make me an instrument of your peace"), in which he demonstrated that this text, wellknown as the Prayer of Saint Francis and become in half a century one the most famous worldwide prayers, appeared, anonymously, in 1912, in France, and has been wrongly attributed to saint Francis around 1925.
Commitments for Peace and Nonviolence
A conscientious objector, he served during his obligatory civilian service (1985–87) at the Cahiers de la Réconciliation, magazine of the MIR, French branch of the International Fellowship of Reconciliation (IFOR). He was editor of this magazine from 1987 to 2006. He has been member of MIR France national committee since 1987 and was MIR France co-president from 1994 to 2004. He was member of IFOR Steering Committee from 1996 to 2000.
Since November 2000, he has been the MIR France representative to the National Committee and president of the French Coalition for the Decade for the Culture of Peace and Nonviolence (2001–10), which became in April 2011 the Coalition for the Education for Nonviolence and Peace.
Since June 2003, he has been the representative of the French Coalition to the International Committee and president of the International Coalition for the Decade for the Culture of Peace and Nonviolence (2001–10), which became in April 2011 the International Network for the Culture of Peace and Nonviolence.
Book
- Christian RENOUX, La prière pour la paix attribuée à saint François : une énigme à résoudre, Paris, Éditions franciscaines, 2001, 210 p.
- Christian RENOUX, La preghiera per la pace attribuita a san Francesco. Un enigma da risolvere, Padoue, Edizioni Messagero Padova (EMP), 2003, Collana: Memoria e profezia, 180 p.
- Book's abstracts in English : « The Origin of the Peace Prayer of St. Francis »
- Book's review in Portuguese
Articles on line
- « Une source de l'histoire de la mystique moderne revisitée : les procès de canonisation », in Mélanges de l'Ecole française de Rome. Italie et Méditerranée, 1993, vol. 105, n° 105-1, p. 177–217.
- « Discerner la sainteté des mystiques. Quelques exemples italiens de l'âge baroque », in Rives nord-méditerranéennes, n° 3, 1999, p. 19–28.
- « Madame Acarie lit Thérèse d'Avila », October 2001.
- « Freud et l'affaire Haizmann », in Psychoanalytische Perspectieven, 2002, t. 20, 2, p. 309–325.
- « Cultivons la paix », interview for the Secours Catholique / Caritas France, June 2004.
- « Décennie de la non-violence et de la paix, quels objectifs pour 2010 ? », in Non-Violence Actualité, n° 285, March–April 2006.
- « La paix, invitée de La Villette », interview for L'Humanité, June 1 2006.
Interview on line
- « Peut-on éduquer à la paix ? », documentary – 2006 – 26 mn. The television program Question d'Église from Jour du Seigneur on French national Channel France 2, presents the second International Salon for Peace Initiatives, which took place in Paris in June 2006 (13,000 participants) (French)
- Interview on Radio Ethic to present the 3rd Salon in May–June 2008 (French)
Categories:- Alumni ENS Fontenay-Saint-Cloud-Lyon
- French historians
- Nonviolence advocates
- Living people
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