Dominique Tronc

Dominique Tronc is a French historian, editor, and scholar of Christian mysticism, especially of seventeenth-century French spirituality and the history of contemplative prayer. He is known for his studies and critical editions of figures associated with the French mystical tradition, including Madame Guyon, Jean de Bernières-Louvigny, Jacques Bertot, and Chrysostom of Saint-Lô. His work has particularly focused on the transmission of contemplative doctrine in early modern France and on what he has described as an “école du cœur” (“school of the heart”) within French spirituality.[1]

Tronc has edited or co-edited numerous volumes of mystical and devotional writings, including works on Franciscan spirituality, the history of contemplative prayer, and the transmission of mystical doctrine in seventeenth-century France. He has also been associated with the republication and critical study of lesser-known mystical authors whose writings had long remained inaccessible or out of print.[2]

Scholarship

Tronc's work has concentrated on the history of interior spirituality in France during the seventeenth century, particularly on traditions of contemplative prayer associated with figures influenced by Teresa of Ávila, John of the Cross, and the French School of Spirituality. His studies frequently examine relationships between mysticism, spiritual direction, ascetic theology, and the transmission of contemplative methods across religious communities and lay devotional circles.[3]

A recurring theme in his scholarship is the existence of spiritual filiations linking contemplative authors and directors in early modern France. In particular, he has written on networks connecting Chrysostom of Saint-Lô, Jean de Bernières-Louvigny, Jacques Bertot, Madame Guyon, and François Fénelon.[4]

Tronc has also contributed to the study of Franciscan mystical traditions. Together with Pierre Moracchini and Jean-Marie Gourvil, he co-edited the three-volume La vie mystique chez les franciscains du XVIIe siècle, a documentary and historical study of mystical spirituality among seventeenth-century Franciscans.[5]

His editions and studies have been cited in academic work on French mysticism, Quietism, and early modern devotional culture.[6][7]

Editions and publications

Tronc has published and edited works on a wide range of mystical authors and themes. His publications include studies of contemplative prayer, editions of seventeenth-century mystical texts, and anthologies of spiritual writings.

Among his better-known works are studies and editions relating to Madame Guyon and the circles surrounding her spirituality.[8]

With Murielle Tronc, he published Une école du cœur (2023), a study of the spiritual tradition of interior prayer and contemplative transformation in seventeenth-century France.[9]

Selected works

  • Bernières-Louvigny, Jean de (2011). Tronc, Dominique (ed.). Œuvres mystiques. Volume I : L'Intérieur chrétien, Le Chrétien intérieur, Pensées. Toulouse: Éditions du Carmel.
  • Guyon, Jeanne-Marie Bouvier de La Motte (2003). Tronc, Dominique (ed.). Correspondance. Tome I : Directions spirituelles. Paris: Honoré Champion. ISBN 2745307398.
  • Guyon, Jeanne-Marie Bouvier de La Motte (2001). Tronc, Dominique (ed.). La Vie par elle-même et autres écrits biographiques. Sources classiques. Vol. 29. Étude littéraire par Andrée Villard. Paris: Honoré Champion. ISBN 2745303805.
  • Guyon, Jeanne-Marie Bouvier de La Motte (2009). Tronc, Dominique (ed.). Les Années d'épreuves de Madame Guyon : emprisonnements et interrogatoires sous Louis XIV. Grenoble: Millon.
  • Tronc, Dominique (2005). Jacques Bertot : directeur mystique. Œuvres choisies. Sources mystiques. Toulouse: Éditions du Carmel.
  • Tronc, Dominique (2003). "Une filiation mystique : Chrysostome de Saint-Lô, Jean de Bernières, Jacques Bertot, Jeanne-Marie Guyon". Dix-septième siècle (218): 95–116.
  • Tronc, Dominique; Moracchini, Pierre; Gourvil, Jean-Marie (2013). La vie mystique chez les franciscains du XVIIe siècle. Paris: Éditions Franciscaines.
  • Tronc, Dominique; Tronc, Murielle (2023). Une école du cœur. Paris: Arfuyen. ISBN 9782845903722.

See also

References

  1. ^ Tronc, Dominique; Tronc, Murielle (2023). Une école du cœur. Paris: Arfuyen. ISBN 9782845903722.
  2. ^ Hurel, Daniel-Odon (2015). "Comptes rendus : La vie mystique chez les franciscains du XVIIe siècle, sous la direction de Dominique Tronc, Pierre Moracchini et Jean-Marie Gourvil". Revue d'histoire de l'Église de France. 101 (246): 203–205. doi:10.3406/rhef.2015.4870.
  3. ^ "Dominique Tronc". Parole et Silence. Retrieved 12 May 2026.
  4. ^ "Recensioni". Studi Francesi. 196. 2022. Retrieved 12 May 2026.
  5. ^ Hurel, Daniel-Odon (2015). "Comptes rendus : La vie mystique chez les franciscains du XVIIe siècle, sous la direction de Dominique Tronc, Pierre Moracchini et Jean-Marie Gourvil". Revue d'histoire de l'Église de France. 101 (246): 203–205. doi:10.3406/rhef.2015.4870.
  6. ^ Verhoeven, Wendy (2023). Mysticism and Spiritual Direction in Seventeenth-Century France (PDF) (Thesis). Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen.
  7. ^ La mystique française du XVIIe siècle (Thesis). Université de Montréal. Retrieved 12 May 2026.
  8. ^ "Publications de Daniel-Odon Hurel". Archives de sciences sociales des religions (180). 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2026.
  9. ^ Tronc, Dominique; Tronc, Murielle (2023). Une école du cœur. Paris: Arfuyen. ISBN 9782845903722.