ABSTRACT

This book examines narratives of individual religious transformation in Western European literature and culture. Religious individuals, themes, experiences and communities are widely represented in diverse literature and culture, including literary texts and visual arts and media. Taking the subject of religious transformation as an angle from which to study constructions of religion, gender and race, this book reveals through various case studies what authors, documentary makers, film makers and playwrights consider to be important (possible) shifts between the old and the new, continuities and discontinuities, and the formation of the self. The chapters demonstrate how individual religious transformations are understood to be shaped by various intersections of difference, and point at the need to consider gender as always related to and co-constructing religion and race. This transdisciplinary and intimate study provides a fresh lens through which to examine pressing questions regarding the place and future of religion, gender and race in contemporary Western Europe.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

The Cultural Work of Religious Transformation

chapter 3|33 pages

Women from Calvinist and Jewish Folds

Negotiating Religious/Secular Demarcations

chapter 4|33 pages

Women Leaving Calvinist and Jewish Folds

Rethinking Gender, and Religion-Race in Dutch Novels about Zeeland

chapter 5|31 pages

Creole and Indigenous Women

Rethinking Europe and Religion

chapter 7|37 pages

Jews, Muslims, Moroccans

Re-membering and Re-imagining Complicated Relationships

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion

A Reflection on Normative Affect, Aliveness and Revolutionary Love

chapter |5 pages

Epilogue