Visual Habits: Nuns, Feminism, and American Postwar Popular Culture

By (author): "Rebecca Sullivan"
Publish Date: 2005
Visual Habits: Nuns, Feminism, and American Postwar Popular Culture
ISBN0802037763
ISBN139780802037763
AsinVisual Habits: Nuns, Feminism, and American Postwar Popular Culture
Original titleVisual Habits: Nuns, Feminism, And American Postwar Popular Culture
The 1950s and 60s were times of extraordinary social and political change across North America that re-drew the boundaries between traditional and progressive, conservative and liberal. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the history of Catholic nuns. During these two decades, nuns boldly experimented with their role in the church, removing their habits, rejecting the cloister, and fighting for social justice. The media quickly took to their cause and dubbed them 'the new nuns, ' modern exemplars of liberated but sexually contained womanhood.With "Visual Habits," Rebecca Sullivan brings this unexamined history of nuns to the fore, revisiting the intersection of three distinct movements - the Second Vatican Council, the second wave of feminism, and the sexual revolution - to explore the pivotal role nuns played in revamping cultural expectations of femininity and feminism.From "The Nun's Story" to "The Flying Nun" to "The Singing Nun," nuns were a major presence in the mainstream media. Charting their evolving representation in film and television, popular music, magazines, and girls' literature, Sullivan discusses these images in the context of the period's seemingly unlimited potential for social change. In the process, she delivers a rich cultural analysis of a topic too long ignored.