Lively Conversations: Meeting Our Mother and Each Other at U.S. Shrines to the Virgin Mary

Location

Hendrickson Dining Room, F. K. Bemis International Center St. Norbert College

Start Date

24-10-2023 7:30 AM

Description

Karen E. Park received her B.A. in English from Lawrence University in Appleton, Wis., and her M.A. and Ph.D in the history of Christianity from the Divinity School of the University of Chicago. Dr. Park’s research interests include American Catholic history, sacred space and the Virgin Mary. She is currently working on a book project about American shrines to the Virgin Mary and their historical and social importance.

About the Lecture

The United States is home to hundreds of shrines to the Virgin Mary, from large suburban complexes, to tiny urban backyard lots. These sites are places where immigrants from places as far flung as Mexico and Vietnam, Haiti and Poland, come to meet their mother in a land far from home, and also to define themselves as both Americans and Catholics. As communities change and adapt over time, relationships to Mary change as well. She is a figure who is both endlessly dynamic and steadfast. One way to think about shrines to Mary is as places where lively and complex conversations take place–conversations about faith and identity, power and gender, hope and fear. In this lecture, Karen E. Park, professor of Theology and Religious studies, discusses the metaphor of “conversation” as a way to understand shrines to Mary across the US, using examples from her edited volume, American Patroness: Marian Shrines and the Making of US Catholicism.

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Oct 24th, 7:30 AM

Lively Conversations: Meeting Our Mother and Each Other at U.S. Shrines to the Virgin Mary

Hendrickson Dining Room, F. K. Bemis International Center St. Norbert College

Karen E. Park received her B.A. in English from Lawrence University in Appleton, Wis., and her M.A. and Ph.D in the history of Christianity from the Divinity School of the University of Chicago. Dr. Park’s research interests include American Catholic history, sacred space and the Virgin Mary. She is currently working on a book project about American shrines to the Virgin Mary and their historical and social importance.

About the Lecture

The United States is home to hundreds of shrines to the Virgin Mary, from large suburban complexes, to tiny urban backyard lots. These sites are places where immigrants from places as far flung as Mexico and Vietnam, Haiti and Poland, come to meet their mother in a land far from home, and also to define themselves as both Americans and Catholics. As communities change and adapt over time, relationships to Mary change as well. She is a figure who is both endlessly dynamic and steadfast. One way to think about shrines to Mary is as places where lively and complex conversations take place–conversations about faith and identity, power and gender, hope and fear. In this lecture, Karen E. Park, professor of Theology and Religious studies, discusses the metaphor of “conversation” as a way to understand shrines to Mary across the US, using examples from her edited volume, American Patroness: Marian Shrines and the Making of US Catholicism.