Since 2005, a number of European films have emerged examining the legacy of Christianity in Western Europe, and the ways in which men, women and children struggle to negotiate questions of religion and secularity, the personal and the institutional, faith and doubt. This article looks at two of these films—Jessica Hausner’s Lourdes (2009) and Dietrich Brüggemann’s Stations of the Cross (2014)—in relation to questions of religious experience, the female body and film style. In both films the battle between these opposing categories is played out on the bodies of women—a paraplegic MS sufferer in Lourdes, an anorexic teen in Stations of the Cross—and both the films end ambiguously with what may, or may not, be a miracle of sorts: a confirmati...
Med udgangspunkt i film breder Fran Benavente og Gloria Salvadó blikket ud til e...
To understand any aspect of being-in-the-world in general or cinematic experience in particular, bot...
One of the challenges for theology is the apparent ease with which one can search for correlations b...
Since 2005, a number of European films have emerged examining the legacy of Christianity in Western ...
The central argument of this dissertation, contrary to the secularisation thesis which predicts the ...
This article considers the representation of the adolescent female body and the relevance of corpore...
This is a film review of Stations of the Cross (Kreuzweg) (2014) directed by Dietrich Brüggeman
In this article, I argue that the 2009 film, Vision: From the Life of Hildegard of Bingen, presents ...
The aim of the article is to systematise the reflections on the way of portraying women in the work ...
<strong>Tendencies in film hermeneutics.</strong> Hollywood is synonymous with the tradi...
The aim of this paper is to offer a critical response to Anton Karl Kozlovic’s article, published in...
This paper is a reading of André Bazin’s article “Cinema and Theology”, which reflects on the relati...
Since its origins, both religious and spiritual dimensions are present in the cinema, an artform tha...
This paper explores the various ways in which Babette\u27s Feast might be called a religious film. F...
Using philosophical propositions from Stanley Cavell\u27s work The World Viewed, I argue in this pap...
Med udgangspunkt i film breder Fran Benavente og Gloria Salvadó blikket ud til e...
To understand any aspect of being-in-the-world in general or cinematic experience in particular, bot...
One of the challenges for theology is the apparent ease with which one can search for correlations b...
Since 2005, a number of European films have emerged examining the legacy of Christianity in Western ...
The central argument of this dissertation, contrary to the secularisation thesis which predicts the ...
This article considers the representation of the adolescent female body and the relevance of corpore...
This is a film review of Stations of the Cross (Kreuzweg) (2014) directed by Dietrich Brüggeman
In this article, I argue that the 2009 film, Vision: From the Life of Hildegard of Bingen, presents ...
The aim of the article is to systematise the reflections on the way of portraying women in the work ...
<strong>Tendencies in film hermeneutics.</strong> Hollywood is synonymous with the tradi...
The aim of this paper is to offer a critical response to Anton Karl Kozlovic’s article, published in...
This paper is a reading of André Bazin’s article “Cinema and Theology”, which reflects on the relati...
Since its origins, both religious and spiritual dimensions are present in the cinema, an artform tha...
This paper explores the various ways in which Babette\u27s Feast might be called a religious film. F...
Using philosophical propositions from Stanley Cavell\u27s work The World Viewed, I argue in this pap...
Med udgangspunkt i film breder Fran Benavente og Gloria Salvadó blikket ud til e...
To understand any aspect of being-in-the-world in general or cinematic experience in particular, bot...
One of the challenges for theology is the apparent ease with which one can search for correlations b...