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Céline Martin’s Images of Thérèse of Lisieux and the Creation of a Modern Saint*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2016

Sophia L. Deboick*
Affiliation:
University of Liverpool

Extract

At the time of the death of Sœur Thérèse de l’Enfant-Jésus (Marie-Françoise-Thérèse Martin, 2 January 1873 — 30 September 1897) the Carmelite convent of Lisieux was a hidden and poor community, destined to remain as obscure and forgotten as Thérèse herself had been during her nine-year career as a nun. Just twenty-eight years later, Thérèse had been made a saint and the Carmel of Lisieux had become the focus of the attention of the whole Catholic world. There was little remarkable about Thérèse’s short and sheltered life, but she has enjoyed an incredible ‘posthumous life’ through her second career as a saint. The autobiographical writings she produced during her time at the Carmel were published in 1898 as L’Histoire d’une âme (The Story of a Sout) and were an instant success, later becoming a classic of Catholic spirituality. Her canonization in 1925 was the quickest since 1588 at the time, and Pope Pius XI referred to her rapid rise to fame as a ‘storm of glory’, later calling her ‘the star of his pontificate’. Named Patroness of the Missions in 1927, she became Patroness of France, alongside Joan of Arc, immediately after the liberation of France in 1944, and in 1997 Pope John Paul II named her a Doctor of the Church. Only the third woman to earn this title, she became ranked alongside the legendary names of Teresa of Àvila and Catherine of Siena. Since 1994 her relics have been on an almost constant world tour and when they visited Ireland in 2001 the organizers estimated that seventy-five per cent of the total population turned out to venerate them — some 2.9 million people. In September and October 2009 they visited England and Wales, a unique event in the religious history of Britain, which stimulated considerable interest in Thérèse as a historical personality. But while the biographies of Thérèse proliferate, the importance of her posthumous existence for European religious culture continues to be overlooked. This paper looks at the construction of the cult of Thérèse of Lisieux after her death, paying particular attention to the role which the Carmel of Lisieux and its key personalities played in this process, and highlighting the central role played by images and commercial products in the development of the cult.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2011

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References

1 See Woodward, Kenneth L., Making Saints. Inside the Vatican: Who become Saints, Who do not, and Why (London, 1991), 107.Google Scholar Josemaría Escrivá, founder of Opus Dei, beat her record by over four months when he was canonized in 2002.

2 Pope Pius XI, address to French pilgrims, 18 May 1925 [the day after the canonization of St Thérèse], in Les Annales de Sainte Thérèse de Lisieux, 15 June 1925, 20.

3 Paul, Pope John II, ‘Apostolic Letter of His Holiness Pope John Paul II, Divini Amoris Scientia’ (19 October 1997), <http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/apost_letters/documents/hf_jp-ii_apl_19101997_divini-amoris_en.html>, accessed 15 March 2010.Google Scholar

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5 On the British visit, see a Catholic Truth Society pamphlet: Barltrop, Keith, Thérèse of Lisieux: On the Visit of her Relics to Great Britain (London, 2009).Google Scholar

6 The only substantial assessment of Thérèse’s cult is Gouley, Bernard, Mauger, Rémi and Chevalier, Emmanuelle, Thérèse de Lisieux ou la grande saga d’une petite sœur (1897-1997) (Paris, 1997)Google Scholar. See also Taylor, Thérèse, ‘Images of Sanctity: Photography of Saint Bernadette of Lourdes and Saint Thérèse of Lisieux’, Nineteenth-Century Contexts 27 (2005), 269–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Jean-François Six has provided the best historical biographies of Thérèse: La Véritable Enfance de Thérèse de Lisieux: Névrose et sainteté (Paris, 1972); idem, Thérèse de Lisieux au Carmel (Paris, 1973). Nevin, Thomas R., Thérèse of Lisieux: God’s Gentle Warrior (New York, 2006)CrossRefGoogle Scholar is the most recent major biography in English. The annual Carmelite bibliography published in Carmelas (1953-) includes works on Thérèse.

7 My current research focuses on the period from the death of Thérèse in 1897 to that of her sister Céline Martin in 1959, on the eve of the social changes seen in the 1960s and the reforms of Vatican II.

8 See, e.g., Kaufman, Suzanne K., Consuming Visions: Mass Culture and the Lourdes Shrine (Ithaca, NY, 2005).Google Scholar

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10 Pauline (Mère Agnès de Jésus, 1861–1951) entered the Carmel in 1882. Marie (Sœur Marie du Sacré Cœur, 1860–1940) entered in 1886. The middle child, Léonie (Sœur Françoise-Thérèse, 1863–1941), later became a Visitandine at Caen. The sisters’ cousin, Marie Guérin (Sœur Marie de l’Eucharistie, 1870–1905), was also a member of the community of the Carmel of Lisieux from 1895.

11 On Céline, see her unpublished memoirs: Lisieux, Archives du Carmel de Lisieux [hereafter ACL], ‘Histoire d’une «Petite âme» qui a traversée une fournaise’ (1909); Stéphane-Joseph Piat, Céline: Sœur Geneviève de la Sainte Face. Sœur et témoin de Sainte Thérèse de l’Enfant-Jésus (Lisieux, 1963), offers a hagiographical account of her life.

12 Langlois, Claude, ‘Photographier des saintes: de Bernadette Soubirous à Thérèse de Lisieux’, in Ménard, Michèle and Duprat, Annie, eds, Histoire, images, imaginaires: Actes du colloque international des 21–22-23 mars 1996, l’Université du Maine (Le Mans) (Maine, 1998), 261–72, at 267–8.Google Scholar

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14 ‘Saint-Sulpician’ is a term for a genre of Catholic religious art of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries which was characterized by a sentimental and ‘feminized’ representation of Jesus and the saints; see Savart, Claude, ‘Á la recherche de l’“art” dit de Saint-Sulpice’, Revue d’histoire de la spiritualité 52 (1976), 265–82 Google Scholar. Savart asserts that the cult of Thérèse in its 1930s heyday marked the end of the Saint-Sulpician period.

15 Anon, ., Une Rose effeuillée (Bar-le-Duc, 1902)Google Scholar.

16 Anon, ., Appel aux petites âmes (Bar-le-Duc, 1904)Google Scholar.

17 Figures from ACL.

18 Anon, ., La Vie en images de la Bienheureuse Thérèse de l’Enfant Jésus (Bar-le-Duc,1923)Google Scholar

19 ACL, May 1923 flyer, archive box S24B, Office Central Catalogues, envelope 2a.

20 ACL, 1908 and August 1911 flyers, Catalogues, 1.

21 ACL, August 1913 flyer, Catalogues, 1.

22 ACL, May 1927 catalogue, Catalogues, 2b.

23 ACL, ‘Recueil des travaux artistiques de Sr Geneviève’, 39. All translations from the French are my own.

24 See Giloteaux, Abbé Paulin, La Bienheureuse Thérèse de l’Enfant-Jésus: Physionomie surnaturelle (Paris, 1923)Google Scholar; Privat, Maurice, Sainte Thérèse de Lisieux (Paris, 1932)Google Scholar; Ghéon, Henri, Sainte Thérèse de Lisieux (Paris, 1934)Google Scholar; Mabille, Pierre, Thérèse de Lisieux (Paris, 1937).Google Scholar

25 Delarue-Mardrus, Lucie, La Petite Thérèse de Lisieux (Paris, 1937), 59.Google Scholar

26 Delarue-Mardrus, Lucie, Sainte Thérèse of Lisieux, trans. Chase, Helen Younger (London, 1929), 31.Google Scholar

27 ACL, de Teil to Mère Agnès, 5 May 1909.

28 Ibid.

29 ACL, ‘Recueil’, 16.

30 Photograph 2 in the sequence established in Sainte-Marie, Françoisde, Visage de Thérèse de Lisieux, 2 vols (Lisieux, 1961).Google Scholar

31 ACL, Mère Agnès to de Teil, 5 May 1909.

32 ACL, de Teil to Mère Agnès, 21 January 1910.

33 ACL, Mère Agnès to de Teil, 21 January 1910.

34 De Sainte-Marie, , Visage, photograph 43.Google Scholar

35 ACL, Dubosq to Céline, 25 January 1911. The Ecclesiastical Tribunal of the Process of Beatification had sanctioned the portrait as the ‘authentic’ representation of Thérèse: ACL, ‘Recueil’, 41.

36 De Sainte-Marie, , Visage, photograph 20Google Scholar.

37 This example is discussed in Pierre Descouvemont and Helmuth Nils Loose, Sainte Thérèse de Lisieux: La Vie en images (Paris, 1995), 510–11.Google Scholar

38 De Sainte-Marie, , Visage, photograph 9. On this composite image, see Marion Lavabre, ‘Sainte comme une image: Thérèse de Lisieux à travers ses représentations’, Terrain, no. 24 (March 1995), 83–90, esp. 88–9.Google Scholar

39 Dubosq, P. Th., A propos des portraits de Sainte Thérèse de l’Enfant-Jésus (Lisieux, 1926).Google Scholar

40 See, e.g., Van der Meersch, Maxence, La Petite Sainte Thérèse (Paris, 1947)Google Scholar, pt 3, ch. 8; Robo, Etienne, Two Portraits of St Teresa of Lisieux (London, 1957)Google Scholar, ch. 2.

41 ACL, statement of 29 April 1940.

42 ACL, ‘Raymond de Bercegol M. vs la Société Commerciale Ph. Vitalie et Fontana’, S24D Office Central Contrefaçons, 3.

43 See Descouvemont, Pierre, Sculpteur de l’âme: Un trappiste au service de Thérèse (Wailly, 2000), 76–9 Google Scholar.

44 ACL, ‘Réfutation du jugement du Gand’, Contrefaçons, 2, farde 10, 1–2.

45 ACL, Fr Brocardus to Carmel, 3 March 1928, and Korda to the Provincial of the Hungarian Jesuits, 23 March 1928, Contrefaçons, 9.

46 ACL, Reimeringer to Carmel, 24 January 1929, Contrefaçons, 8.

47 Procès de béatification et canonisation de Sainte Thérèse de l’Enfant-Jésus et de la Sainte-Face, 2 vols (Rome, 1973, 1976), 2: 799. This was repeated in Celine’s published memoirs: Sœur Geneviève de la Sainte Face, Conseils et souvenirs (Lisieux, 1952), 35.

48 Descouvemont, Sculpteur de l’âme, 37.

49 In de Sainte-Marie, Visage.

50 On the transformation of Thérèse’s representation after 1959, see Harris, Alana, ‘Transformations in English Catholic Spirituality and Popular Religion, 1945–1980’ (unpublished D.Phil, thesis, University of Oxford, 2008)Google Scholar, ch. 4, and Taylor, Thérèse, Bernadette of Lourdes: Her Life, Death and Visions (London, 2003), 317–18 Google Scholar.

51 De Sainte-Marie, , Visage, 24Google Scholar.