The Culture of Life and the New Maternity

Within the divergent streams of late-modern and largely Western feminism, the experience and ethos (and ethics) of motherhood and the significance of the “maternal body” have been hotly contested and problematic. What might be called “the maternal problematic” is also evident in the highly flammable...

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Main Author: Anna Krohn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/11/574
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spelling doaj-5439c3ce56064014b570707b305978c62020-11-25T03:33:56ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442020-11-011157457410.3390/rel11110574The Culture of Life and the New MaternityAnna Krohn0School of Education, University of Notre Dame, Broadway 2007, AustraliaWithin the divergent streams of late-modern and largely Western feminism, the experience and ethos (and ethics) of motherhood and the significance of the “maternal body” have been hotly contested and problematic. What might be called “the maternal problematic” is also evident in the highly flammable touchpoints between Catholic magisterial teaching and secular feminism—especially in relation to women’s work, vocation and perhaps most contentiously, in relation to women’s fertility and pregnancy. This article mines Pope Saint John Paul II’s major encyclical letter of 1995, <i>Evangelium Vitae</i> (The Gospel of Life) and his intervention into this charged milieu. The Encyclical is rightly viewed as an important exegesis and expansion on the traditional Catholic magisterial teaching upon the ethics of the “sanctity of life”. This article aims to demonstrate that the Encyclical also attempts a fresh line of departure, by weaving into the ethical discussion the importance of “the maternal” as a distinctive interpersonal experience and awareness. This enriches the pastoral and ethical voice of the Church’s witness to human dignity and human life. The Encyclical contains the seeds of what this article will call “a new maternity”, a type of meta-ethos, integral to the development of a “new feminism” which is also aligned and pivotal to the formation of “a culture of life The article will suggest that far from presenting a reductive, oppressive or constructivist view of women and maternity, <i>Evangelium Vitae</i>, when read in synthesis with the Polish Pope’s wider <i>ressourcement</i> of “theological anthropology,” explores three original themes: (a) the importance of maternal “creational contemplation” in women as a force for a humane societal ethos; (b) the invitational dramatics of the maternal in understanding the Catholic ethos surrounding procreation; (c) the personal solidarity and iconic role of the Virgin Mary’s maternity in all expressions of women’s maternal vocation whether physical, existential and/or mystical.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/11/574culture of lifematernitymariologytheological anthropologyJohn Paul II
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Krohn
spellingShingle Anna Krohn
The Culture of Life and the New Maternity
Religions
culture of life
maternity
mariology
theological anthropology
John Paul II
author_facet Anna Krohn
author_sort Anna Krohn
title The Culture of Life and the New Maternity
title_short The Culture of Life and the New Maternity
title_full The Culture of Life and the New Maternity
title_fullStr The Culture of Life and the New Maternity
title_full_unstemmed The Culture of Life and the New Maternity
title_sort culture of life and the new maternity
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Within the divergent streams of late-modern and largely Western feminism, the experience and ethos (and ethics) of motherhood and the significance of the “maternal body” have been hotly contested and problematic. What might be called “the maternal problematic” is also evident in the highly flammable touchpoints between Catholic magisterial teaching and secular feminism—especially in relation to women’s work, vocation and perhaps most contentiously, in relation to women’s fertility and pregnancy. This article mines Pope Saint John Paul II’s major encyclical letter of 1995, <i>Evangelium Vitae</i> (The Gospel of Life) and his intervention into this charged milieu. The Encyclical is rightly viewed as an important exegesis and expansion on the traditional Catholic magisterial teaching upon the ethics of the “sanctity of life”. This article aims to demonstrate that the Encyclical also attempts a fresh line of departure, by weaving into the ethical discussion the importance of “the maternal” as a distinctive interpersonal experience and awareness. This enriches the pastoral and ethical voice of the Church’s witness to human dignity and human life. The Encyclical contains the seeds of what this article will call “a new maternity”, a type of meta-ethos, integral to the development of a “new feminism” which is also aligned and pivotal to the formation of “a culture of life The article will suggest that far from presenting a reductive, oppressive or constructivist view of women and maternity, <i>Evangelium Vitae</i>, when read in synthesis with the Polish Pope’s wider <i>ressourcement</i> of “theological anthropology,” explores three original themes: (a) the importance of maternal “creational contemplation” in women as a force for a humane societal ethos; (b) the invitational dramatics of the maternal in understanding the Catholic ethos surrounding procreation; (c) the personal solidarity and iconic role of the Virgin Mary’s maternity in all expressions of women’s maternal vocation whether physical, existential and/or mystical.
topic culture of life
maternity
mariology
theological anthropology
John Paul II
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/11/574
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