Submitted to Program Units |
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1: Contextualizing the Catholic Sexual Abuse Crisis Seminar |
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
This panel demonstrates how research on women religious challenges our predominant narratives of Catholic clergy sexual abuse. The first paper, on “The Sexual Economies of Clericalism,” centers questions of agency, subjectivity, and submission for survivors of abuse by Catholic nuns and theorizes the gendered construction of sexual knowledge. The second paper, “Abuse in the Latin American Church,” reframes these questions by arguing that women religious are a distinctively vulnerable population for abuses perpetrated by male clergy – a problem that is particularly pronounced in countries like Bolivia, where the Church’s high social status has continued to silence victimized nuns. The third paper, “Everyday Spiritual Abuse,” draws attention to broader patterns of gender-based violence in Australian Catholicism, theorizing how everyday forms of gendered harm, including misogyny and breadcrumbing, create the foundation for systemic Catholic sexual violence.
Papers
- The Sexual Economies of Clericalism: Understanding the Positionality of Catholic Women Religious in the Abuse Crisis
- Abuse in the Latin American Church: An Evolving Crisis at the Core of Catholicism
- Everyday Spiritual Abuse: Investigating the mechanisms of misogyny and breadcrumbing in Catholic settings