ABSTRACT

A Visual Approach to the Study of Religious Orders applies visual methods to the exploration of various facets of religious life, such as everyday lived experience, contemporary monastic identity or monastic architecture. Presenting a series of visual essays, it treats images not as simple illustrations but as an autonomous form of expression, capable of unveiling vital and developmental layers of experience, while inviting readers to examine and interpret the data themselves. The first book of its kind, it brings together case studies from various locations across Europe to demonstrate what the use of visual methodologies can contribute to social scientific research on religious orders. As such, it will appeal to scholars and students of sociology, religious studies and theology and anyone with interests in religious orders.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Linking monasteries and religious orders with the visual

chapter |14 pages

Photographing friars

Visualising the history of changing Dutch Augustinian identities

chapter |16 pages

Nun with a camera

An insider’s view (the case of a Russian Orthodox monastery)

chapter |30 pages

One year in a Dominican convent in Sudetenland

Religious community in a post-atheistic and post-secular situation

chapter |27 pages

Shooting monastic identity

Reflections on photography and spiritual transformation

chapter |15 pages

Monastic architecture as a bridge between ecology and spirituality

A case study of a Benedictine monastery in Clerlande, Belgium

chapter |16 pages

Outside, inside – monasteries and monasticism in the local environment

Religion, social memory and economy (the case of Cistercian monasteries in Poland) 1

chapter |17 pages

Photo-elicitation

Visual methods and monasteries. A few preliminary considerations and some results