Unveiled: The Hidden Lives of Nuns

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Author: Cheryl L. Reed

ISBN-10: 0425232387

ISBN-13: 9780425232385

Category: Clergy - Roman Catholic

Surprising. Provocative. Honest.\ For Unveiled, reporter Cheryl Reed interviewed more than 300 nuns of diverse beliefs, lifestyles, and orders. She lived and prayed with them, witnessed their vows, mourned and celebrated with them, and asked questions no one had ever dared before: about love and sex, life and death, faith and joy, and loss and regret. In the process, Reed would discover more about motherhood, relationships, faith, and feminism than she ever gleaned from the outside world.

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Surprising. Provocative. Honest. For Unveiled, reporter Cheryl Reed interviewed more than 300 nuns of diverse beliefs, lifestyles, and orders. She lived and prayed with them, witnessed their vows, mourned and celebrated with them, and asked questions no one had ever dared before: about love and sex, life and death, faith and joy, and loss and regret. In the process, Reed would discover more about motherhood, relationships, faith, and feminism than she ever gleaned from the outside world. Library Journal Journalist Reed (Chicago Sun-Times) undertook a four-year journey to visit as many religious houses, convents, hospitals, and schools as she could in order to immerse herself in the "nun world." Her quest-to discover why a woman would choose a peculiar lifestyle, community, and commitment that function against the prevailing culture-serves as the meat of this participant-observer account. Reed details dozens of interviews with sisters who run the gamut from cloistered, habited nuns to social-justice activists to pro-life clinic workers. Each short account provides small insights into the calling and rationale behind this seemingly countercultural movement. Reed provides the questions as well as the answers and analysis, which sometimes begs further exploration (for example, why are habited orders growing?). She also tends to valorize religious life without adequately critiquing its negative impacts on the family, society, or even the individuals themselves. The work is not a systematic, academic consideration of the issues but is shaped more by the author's journalistic curiosity than by anthropological research techniques. That said, it is a remarkably accessible, very readable account. Recommended for women's studies and popular religion collections everywhere.-Sandra Collins, Univ. of Pittsburgh Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

AcknowledgmentsPrologue: Life Before the NunsPt. 1Community1Beyond Stereotype32Sisters in the 'Hood26Pt. 2Obedience3Politics of the Habit524Sisters with Attitude745The Elastic Cloister104Pt. 3Chastity6The Sensual Sisters1327A Divine Intimacy157Pt. 4Poverty8The Last of the Monjitas1839Teaching on the Rez21110Among the Down and Out in L.A.235Pt. 5Spirituality11Spiritual Protests25912The Mystic Mother Superior27913Finding the Future, Seeing the Past298Epilogue: Life After the Nuns323

\ Library JournalJournalist Reed (Chicago Sun-Times) undertook a four-year journey to visit as many religious houses, convents, hospitals, and schools as she could in order to immerse herself in the "nun world." Her quest-to discover why a woman would choose a peculiar lifestyle, community, and commitment that function against the prevailing culture-serves as the meat of this participant-observer account. Reed details dozens of interviews with sisters who run the gamut from cloistered, habited nuns to social-justice activists to pro-life clinic workers. Each short account provides small insights into the calling and rationale behind this seemingly countercultural movement. Reed provides the questions as well as the answers and analysis, which sometimes begs further exploration (for example, why are habited orders growing?). She also tends to valorize religious life without adequately critiquing its negative impacts on the family, society, or even the individuals themselves. The work is not a systematic, academic consideration of the issues but is shaped more by the author's journalistic curiosity than by anthropological research techniques. That said, it is a remarkably accessible, very readable account. Recommended for women's studies and popular religion collections everywhere.-Sandra Collins, Univ. of Pittsburgh Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.\ \