Christian Ayne Crouch is Dean of Graduate Studies, Director of the Center for Indigenous Studies, and Professor of History and American and Indigenous Studies at Bard College.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Introduction: Glory beyond the Water 1. Onontio's War, Louis XV's Peace 2. Interpreting Landscapes of Violence 3. Culture Wars in the Woods 4. Assigning a Value to Valor 5. The Losing Face of France 6. Paradise Epilogue: Mon Frere Sauvage
Christian Crouch's Nobility Lost is a delightfully creative book about the Seven Years War, frequently entertaining and invariably well written. In clearly explaining the importance of the days, weeks, and months between more frequently studied battles and campaigns and by shifting the discussion of the Seven Years War beyond important but familiar battles and the Treaty of Paris, Crouch has written an excellent and important book. (New England Quarterly) Christian Crouch's valuable study 'triangulates' its sources to construct a combined narrative that also functions as an enthnohistory of the multiple military cultures engaged, as traditional American historians would say, in 'winning' or 'losing' America. Her 'cultural history' of the war affords the reader a comprehensive history of the European encounter with indigenous peoples that presents new materials and deeper contemporary analysis than previously available in French or English. Many excellent campaign, national, or imperial accounts exist, but none so seamlessly and thoroughly discuss the war, the Native American cultures of war and diplomacy, Canadian military elites, and French military and court cultures. (The Sixteenth Century Journal) Crouch offers an interesting approach to the military history of New France by examining French, colonial, and First Nations martial cultures and traditions of honor. French regulars fought within the European tradition but the colonial troops had been forced for decades to deal with their Indian allies and accommodate their practices and traditions. The lessons of the war affected the French colonial experience elsewhere in the coming decades, and by tracing the subsequent career of Louis-Antoine de Bougainville, a veteran of the New France war, Crouch convincingly examines the arc of empire. The prose is good, and the research in French and North American archives is extensive, the bibliography complete. (CHOICE) In this new world, 'honour' still mattered, although not exactly the kind cultivated by French nobles. As Crouch indicates in her illuminating book, a man's reputation counted for everything in the borderlands of North America. Valour and intelligence did receive their reward in flourishing communities of mixed French and Native American communities-until these communities were destroyed by land-hungry American settlers in the 19th century. (Literary Review of Canada) This excellent book examines both the defeat of New France during the Seven Years' War and the impact of the military disaster on French imperialism. Christian Ayne Crouch views the conquest through the lens of the 'culture war' between French and Canadian officers over the rules governing warfare. While Canadians accepted the need to engage in diplomacy and warfare on Native terms, French elites demanded Native subjugation and rejected indigenous martial practices. This is a solid work of scholarship which I highly recommend to anyone with an interst in France's first Atlantic empire. (American Historical Review) Violence is often described and too easily dismissed as senseless. In Nobility Lost, Christian Ayne Crouch insists that violence is, in fact, full of meaning. For historical actors and historians alike, warfare is 'a text to be read,' a 'landscape' to be interpreted. This insight is by no means a new one in the field of early American history, but with this richly textured and engaging book, Crouch becomes one of the few scholars to bring it to bear beyond the Anglophone world and on the less well-trodden ground of mid-eighteenth-century New France. (William and Mary Quarterly) Crouch's nuanced treatment of military, economic, and political considerations of the French and their allies are among the book's strengths. So, too, is her treatment of the Native Americans as diplomatic and military partners, even if the French did not always see them as equal partners. Nobility Lost provides a promising model for other Franco-American explorations of the Seven Years' War. (H-War)

