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[Commlist] Call for Chapter proposals: A force of habit: Nuns in popular culture
Wed Feb 01 23:35:20 GMT 2023
Nuns have a presence in cinema as longstanding as the medium itself,
including the 1922 horror film /Haxan/. 2021’s /Benedetta/, a
controversial but successful Paul Verhoeven film, is a recent
restatement of the capacity for stories about women religious, or women
in vocation normally called nuns, to be the source of powerful and
successful works across all conceivable genres.
Statistics show the decline of religion in the western world but
religion and its institutions maintain a prominent place in society and
in creative outputs. Popular culture interprets, challenges and
recreates religious practice and identity. At a time fewer people may be
engaging with actual religious organisations or institutions, popular
culture is more powerful than ever in shaping perceptions. Sexuality,
agency, authority and leadership all register when popular culture turns
attention to sisters in religious orders.
Nuns enable a rich array of story-telling types and genres, and
character archetypes and stereotypes in both film and television. Nuns
are central characters in some of the most popular and notable film and
television productions of all time, among them /The Sound of Music,
Black Narcissus, The Bells of St Mary/, and /Philomena /on the big
screen and /Call the Midwife/ and /Brides of Christ/ on television.
Alongside these major dramas lurk the disreputable works in the
so-called ‘lost continent’ of exploitation and horror, from /Silent
Night, Deadly Night/ and /American Horror Story /to the many films in
the ‘nunsploitation’ grindhouse films.
Despite their prevalence in popular culture and the strongly consistent
visual aesthetic of cinematic and televisual nuns because of the (often
anachronistically retained) habit, the presence and meaning of religious
sisters in popular culture has been little interrogated in academic
literature.Rebecca Sullivan’s /Visual Habits: Nuns, Feminism and
American Postwar Popular culture/ from 2005 is an important survey but
is limited to the United States. Colleen McDannell’s /Material
Christianity: Religion and Popular Culture in America /(1995) is now
nearly 30 years old and takes a far wider focus than women religious.
This collection therefore will be a timely and exciting opportunity to
explore this multitude of works.
While the type and number of popular culture works about nuns is
expansive and growing, especially in the years since earlier works on
religion in popular culture were written, the specific focus of this
collection will be for chapters exploring the appropriation of the
imagery and activity of nuns by popular culture in ways that have often,
but not universally, created on-screen nuns as a strange, disturbing or
even abusive presence. Central to this collection will be exploration of
the tensions between actual and fictional nuns and the potential found
in genres from drama to comedy and others to raise questions about the
identity, actions, reputations and agency of women in religious orders.
In actuality, in the western world at least, the number of women
pursuing a vocation as a religious is terminally declining. The nuns who
remain are often a visually inconspicuous presence as post-Vatican II
and other modernising trends mean religious habits are either reduced or
wholly abandoned. Alongside and contrary to this real-world decline and
visual eclipse, fully habited remain a major element of popular culture.
Nuns and other religious do retain some prominence but because of the
number of official commissions and investigations into historic abuse in
convent run orphanages, missions, schools, and laundries and from
Ireland to Canada to Australia, stories of actual abuse have emerged
worse than any possible cinematic horror. Similarly, non-fictional and
documentary film making, have opened up tensions in perceptions of nuns
from the laudatory presentation of Sister Helen Prejean in first
documentary then film about the abolition of the death penalty to the
competing portrayals of Mother Teresa in terms of both her public and
private personae.
From these points about the actual and the fictional, there extends
exploration of the inherent strangeness of nuns, their vocations and
their enclosed lives that frequently registers in popular culture. In
short, the institutions western religious orders, the numbers, their
viability and their reputations are pursuing complex and challenging
trajectories in the modern world. Analogous to these actual issues of
identity and practice are the expansive, prominent, and still growing
works on nuns in popular culture. In this popular culture, nuns have
been many things from the wise and caring presence of Hollywood classics
such as /The Sound of Music/, the sinister and even satanic of horror
movies, then sources of female agency, leadership and identity that may
be an affront to or challenged by masculine authority such as in /Doubt
/to /Two Mules for Sister Sara /and /Lambs of God/, to agents of abuse
and neglect seen in /The Magdalene Sisters /and /Philomena/. Perhaps
most often they are simply a strange and even challenging presence, a
stranger to wider society, but still essential to popular culture. It is
also important to note that religion is not declining in the global
south, and popular culture there may be presenting its own impressions
of female religious life.
There is a diversity of genres and works that could be considered as
well as a rich number of themes including:
Comedy (/The Flying Nun/, /Nuns on the Run/, /Nasty Habits/, /The Blues
Brothers/)
//
Horror//(/The Conjuring/,/The Nun/, /The Devils/, /American Horror Story/)
Musicals (/Sister Act/, /The Sound of Music/, /Nunsense/)
Period drama (/Brides of Christ/, /Call the Midwife/, /Pillars of the
Earth/, /Extramuros/, /The Innocents/)
Science fiction (/Doctor Who/, /Warrior Nuns/, /Revelations/, /Sarah
Jane Adventures/)
Drama (/Black Narcissus/, /Bells of St Mary’s/, /Nun’s Story/, /Doubt/)
Crime drama (/Father Dowling Mysteries/, /Sister Boniface Mysteries/,
/Quiet as a Nun/)
The representation of nuns and their environments in period and modern
settings
Iconography and the semiotics of religion
Feminism and religious authority
Confronting or perpetrating crime and evil
Documentary and non-fiction and the examination of religious histories
Controversies and past injustices
Celebrity nuns or notorious nuns
Nuns who singularise
Public and private lives and the spaces of religious vocation
Other enclosed communities in fictions (finishing schools, academies,
sororities)
We are assembling a special collection of essays that consider
addressing the intersection of nuns with popular culture in light of the
reflections offered above on fictional and non-fictional representations
of nuns and the use and appropriation of their distinctive iconography.
Television and film from different national contexts will be welcome.
*/Advice for contributors/*
If you are interested in contributing to this collection, we ask that
you submit an abstract of up to 250 words explaining the focus and
approach your proposed essay.The proposed volume is intended to be
scholarly but accessible in tone and approach. Each contribution should
be around 6000 words.Abstracts should be emailed to
(marcus.harmes /at/ usq.edu.au) <mailto:(marcus.harmes /at/ usq.edu.au)>by March 31st
2023 and contributors with successful abstracts will be notified in
mid-April.
Full chapters would be expected by 29 September 2023.
An American publisher is interested in this proposal. Editors are Marcus
K Harmes and Meredith Harmes, University of Southern Queensland.
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