ABSTRACT

Marian devotion within the Catholic Church has always been seen as a remnant of ultramontanism and a key factor in maintaining the Church’s misogyny and repression of women and female sexuality. The reforms of the Second Vatican Council attempted to drag Catholicism kicking and screaming into the modern era, away from superstition and ritual with a new interpretation of a Christocentric Mary.

However, there exists within traditional Catholic Marian devotion a unique religious space for women which is absent from all other mainstream faiths. Furthermore, Marian devotions play a dynamic and vital role in the popular Catholicism of Latin America, including the radical church. Although the ‘reforms’ of Vatican II have allowed women a more prominent role amongst the laity, they have also diminished the importance of Mary and attempted to remove both superstition and sensuality from the Catholic faith. In many respects, they have merely served to reinforce the Church’s patriarchy and androcentrism.

This article will warn against the temptation to reject outright all that is pertinent to traditional Marian devotion as being detrimental to women and women’s sexuality. On the contrary, instead of disposing with tradition–the accumulation of experiences that include resistance and rebellion–we must invest in it our sexual energy in all its manifestations; so that it becomes possible to move towards a new ethic of sexual liberation. Indeed, by employing a little daring and adventure and making our Marian theology a little dangerous and subversive we can reclaim the sensual, the intimate and the erotic. We must allow her, and ourselves, to ‘walk on the wild side’.