Making bodies and worlds

religious affects in 120 BPM

Authors

  • Stefanie Knauss Villanova University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.22259

Keywords:

120 BPM, Robin Campillo, Affect, Religion, Sacrament, Embodiment, LGBTQ, AIDS/ HIV, film analysis, audience reception, transcendence

Abstract

Inspired by the intense affective experience of watching the film 120 BPM (Beats Per Minute/Battements par minute) (Robin Campillo, 2017) about the HIV/AIDS activist group ACT UP Paris, I turn to affect theory to better understand how the film did what it did, tracing the circulating emotions of joy, anger, love, sadness, frustration, and exhilaration among the protagonists on screen, between the screen and the audience, and among the audience. I argue that the film’s affective economy has a religious quality in the way it creates bodies, worlds, and communities, and more specifically, that these religious sensibilities resonate with Christian affectivities in all their complexity. Thus, my argument about the religious affects of 120 BPM also contributes to the reflection on the affective dimensions of Christianity, and religion more broadly, and on the religious dimensions of affective-embodied aesthetic experiences.

Author Biography

  • Stefanie Knauss, Villanova University

    Stefanie Knauss is a professor of theology at Villanova University (USA). In her research, she engages with film and other media, gender studies and queer theory, and questions of embodiment and sexualities. Recently published work includes Religion and Film: Representation, Experience, Meaning (Brill, 2020). She is a member of the board of directors of Concilium: International Journal for Theology and co-chief editor of the Journal for Religion, Film and Media.

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Published

2022-11-23

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Knauss, S. (2022). Making bodies and worlds: religious affects in 120 BPM. Body and Religion, 5(2), 222–243. https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.22259