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Gëzim Alpion: Mother Teresa: Saint or Celebrity? E premte, 14-12-2007, 09:11pm (GMT1) Press Release 12 October 2007 Announcing the Indian Edition (in English) of Gëzim Alpion’s Mother Teresa: Saint or Celebrity? Did the media use Mother Teresa or did Mother Teresa use the media? Published by Routledge India, New Delhi, 2008, ISBN: 978-0-415-39247-1 Price: Rs 325.00
Alpion reveals how Mother Teresa’s image was created by her quiet assent to media attention. While many celebrities have a tough time maintaining their public profile and at the same time protecting their private life, Mother Teresa did not make such a separation. Her mission was her home, and she invited reporters to see her at any time of day. However, she too had parts of her life guarded from public view: her early years and some of the experiences that led her to decide to leave Albania for a strange land to serve a heavenly father. New material on the death of Mother Teresa’s father reveals that it had an impact on the turn her life took. According to Alpion, the death of her father and the transferral of dependence to a spiritual father and her adoration of Jesus Christ had a significant bearing on this decision. But information on these early years was quietly filtered and suppressed where necessary. And it was the artful manipulation of the kind of information that Mother Teresa encouraged the media to serve that leaves Alpion commenting on this remarkable woman’s skills with the press. An interesting point that Alpion makes is the cross-over that Mother Teresa made when she took up the Indian garb, apart from Indian citizenship. He writes about how her empathy with non-Christian Indian girls at St Mary’s (where she taught girls from poorer families) was partly brought on by the fact that she was never recognised as a European by other European nuns. Later, she set up her mission as a completely indigenous Indian order, and for this reason wooed novices directly from India at a rate that is incomparable to any other Catholic order. Alpion writes that this was a recipe that no missiologist so far had thought of. In this book, Alpion gives an informed and impartial account of the role the media played in constructing the icon that was Mother Teresa. He offers an interesting insight into cross-cultural interactions and media-celebrity relationships. He explores the significance of Mother Teresa to the mass media, to celebrity culture, to the Church, and to various political and national groups. Dr Gëzim Alpion is an acclaimed academic, writer, playwright, journalist, and a media, political and culture analyst. His books include Vouchers (2001), Foreigner Complex: Essays and Fiction about Egypt (2002), If Only the Dead Could Listen (2008), and Encounters with Civilizations: From Alexander the Great to Mother Teresa (2008). At present, he is Lecturer in Sociology and Media Studies at the University of Birmingham, UK. Gëzim Alpion’s Mother Teresa: Saint or Celebrity? was initially published in paperback (£16.99) and hardback (£65.00) by Routledge in London in October 2006 and in New York and Canada in December 2006.
Ms M Gopinath Dr Gëzim Alpion |
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