RT Article T1 Visualizing the modern Catholic university: the original intention of "touchdown Jesus" at the University of Notre Dame JF Material religion VO 6 IS 3 SP 336 OP 368 A1 Grubiak, Margaret M. LA English PB Taylor & Francis YR 2010 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1667210475 AB "Touchdown Jesus," the well-known moniker of the enormous mural of Christ on the University of Notre Dame's skyscraper library, defines the University of Notre Dame in the popular imagination, wittily uniting the university's famed football tradition with its Catholic identity. Yet the original intention of the 1964 mural, formally titled The Word of Life, and its library had little to do with football. Instead, the library and mural were part of President Theodore M. Hesburgh's program to raise Notre Dame's national reputation as a modern research university. The library and mural embodied reforms then underway at the Second Vatican Council, whose support of academic freedom allowed Catholic universities to strive toward the intellectual standards of their secular counterparts. This article argues that the library's modern architecture and its figurative, Christocentric mural visualized the University of Notre Dame's ambition to become a great American university without leaving its Catholic identity behind. K1 Catholic University K1 Millard Sheets K1 Second Vatican Council K1 Theodore Hesburgh K1 Touchdown Jesus K1 University of Notre Dame K1 Word of Life K1 mural DO 10.2752/175183410X12862096296847