Description
As a subculture, cloistered monastic nuns live hidden from public view by choice. Once a woman joins the cloister and makes final vows, she is almost never seen and her voice isn’t heard; her story is essentially nonexistent in the historical record and collective, public history.
From interviews conducted over six years, Abbie Reese tells the stories of the Poor Clare Colettine Order, a cloistered contemplative order at the Corpus Christi Monastery in Rockford, Illinois. Seldom leaving their 25,000-square-foot gated enclosure, members of this community embrace an extreme version of poverty and anonymity-a separation that enables them to withdraw from the world to devote their lives to prayer. This removal, they contend, permits them to have a greater affect on humanity than if they maintained direct contact with loved ones and strangers.
Dedicated to God explores individual and cultural identity through oral history interviews with several generations of nuns, specializing in the origins and life stories of the women who have chosen to turn into members of one of the most strictest religious orders. But the narrative could also be one of a collective memory and struggle against extinction and modernity, a determination to create community within the framework of ancient rules.
The writer’s stunning photographs of their dual worlds, religious and quotidian, add texture to the narrative. This artistic and ethnographic work highlights the countercultural values and dedication of individuals who, at implausible personal cost, live for love of God and humanity, out of faith in what cannot be seen, and with the belief that they’re going to be rewarded in the afterlife.