Redeeming Sexual Difference: Stigmata, The Messenger and Luce Irigaray's Bleeding Woman

The 1999 film Stigmata foregrounds the difficulties and hazards involved in representing a woman as a Christ figure, and the necessity of imagining new ways of understanding gendered identity within Christianity. The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc (1999) similarly confronts the female body in a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ugrina, Luciana (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: University of Saskatchewan [2009]
In: Journal of religion and popular culture
Year: 2009, Volume: 21, Issue: 1
Online Access: Volltext (Resolving-System)
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Summary:The 1999 film Stigmata foregrounds the difficulties and hazards involved in representing a woman as a Christ figure, and the necessity of imagining new ways of understanding gendered identity within Christianity. The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc (1999) similarly confronts the female body in an attempt to reconfigure the relationship between femininity and the sacred. Considering both films alongside the psycholinguistics of Luce Irigaray surfaces the "bleeding woman," a figure of lack who paradoxically underwrites and secures that which excludes her - a masculine symbolic. Building on Tina Beattie's assertions that the sacramentality of the female body in orthodox Catholicism is nonexistent - a result, she argues, of an underdeveloped theology of gender and embodiment - I explore if a way beyond the essentialist predicaments of sexed identity in Christianity might be found in Irigaray's understanding of the divine.
ISSN:1703-289X
Contains:Enthalten in: Journal of religion and popular culture
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.3138/jrpc.21.1.004