My Favourite Mystic
By AJ Langley
My Favourite MysticFeb 18, 2021
My Favourite Mystic 55: Lee Irwin on Black Elk/Heȟáka Sápa
AJ Langley is joined by Lee Irwin to talk about the Lakota mystic and healer Heȟáka Sápa (Black Elk). We talk about the difference between Native and Christian conceptions of visionary experiences, embodied spiritual practices, and the importance of acting on visions for the benefit of community.
My Favourite Mystic 54: Barbara Newman on Charles Williams
On this episode Barbara Newman tells host AJ Langley all about her guilty pleasure, the
poet, novelist, theologian and literary critic, Charles Williams (1886-1945). We talk about coinherence, charisma, energy harvesting rituals, Dante and Beatrice, and Barbara's love for
Taliessin through Logres.
Follow us on Twitter and YouTube @myfavmystic and we will see you next month!
My Favourite Mystic 53: Rowan Wilson on Walter Hilton
Rowan Wilson joins AJ Langley to celebrate the works of Walter Hilton (d. 1396). We talk about the moral stakes of a life in the world, the existence of devotional guides as proof that devotion wasn't always easy, and the importance of a good night's sleep.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic and we will see you next month!
My Favourite Mystic 52: Genevieve Caufield on Dorothea of Montau
Genevieve Caufield joins the podcast to speak about the Prussian anchoress and visionary Dorothea of Montau (1347-1394). We talk about the joys of having two "lives" (neither of which say mush about her life), replacing her heart with a fiery lump of flesh, and declarations of orthodoxy.
My Favourite Mystic 51: Maria Oen on Birgitta of Sweden
And we are back! On this episode Maria Oen talks about her long-lasting interest in the mystic, saint, and founder of the Bridgettines, Birgitta of Sweden (d. 1373). We talk about her time in Italy, her high-status connections, her insistence that the Pope return to Rome, and her duties as the Virgin Mary's daughter-in-law.
My Favourite Mystic 50: Andrew Kraebel on Richard Rolle
Andrew Kraebel (@hermitofhampole) joins the podcast for our second episode on the fourteenth-century English mystic, hermit, and religious writer Richard Rolle (c. 1300-1349). We talk about translating Rolle's writing, his poetry, his writing for women, and the importance of the whole person to the mystical experience.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic
My Favourite Mystic 49: Harri Hudspith on Teresa of Ávila
This month, artist and researcher Harri Hudspith (@harri_hudspith) joins host AJ Langley (@medievalmystics) to discuss the Carmelite nun, reformer, mystic, and saint Teresa of Ávila. We talk about playing hermits in the garden, learning how to cry over the Passion, and how to become so virile that you shock men. To see more of Harri's work, visit https://t.co/UUOktrp8hj
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic
My Favourite Mystic 48: Delfi Nieto-Isabel on Na Prous Boneta
On this episode, AJ Langley (@medievalmystics) is joined by Delfi Nieto-Isabel (@delfinietois) speaks about the charismatic heretic, mystic, and incarnation of the Holy Spirit, Na Prous Boneta (c. 1296-1328). We talk about why she thought that Pope John XXII was the Anti-Christ, the age of the Holy Spirit, Peter John Olivi and apocalyptic theology, and the Holy Trinity as tiny men who jump on Na Prous!
Subscribe and follow us on Twitter (@myfavmystic)!
My Favourite Mystic 47: Biörn Tjällén on Margareta
This month, Biörn Tjällén joins AJ Langley to speak about the Christian mystic Margareta, a woman of Sámi origin who travelled through Sweden in the late fourteenth and early fifteenth century to gain support from Swedish religious authorities for the increase in pastoral care from those in the Northern regions of Sweden. We talk about the lack of information that we have, the letters of support, her connections with the Queen of Sweden (also Margareta), her life as a parallel to that of St Birgitta of Sweden.
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My Favourite Mystic 46: Sander Vloebergs on Lutgardis
This week, AJ Langley s joined by dancer, choreographer, and theologian Sander Vloebergs to discuss the medieval mystic Lutgardis (c. 1182-1246). Turns out, she was an absolute boss! She returned God's gifts until she got the one that worked the best for her, she controlled their relationship and demanding God be as compassionate as He claimed, and saved souls from purgatory by demanding their release!
For more of Sander, including a video of his dance inspired by Lutgardis, visit https://artistictheologylab.com/
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 45: Becky Field on the Cloud Author
Fleshly Janglers and Pinchers be gone! The wisdom of this episode in not for you! Becky Field joins the podcast this week to speak about the Cloud Author. We talk about the frustration, confusion, and peace (?) that comes from becoming nothing, the best insults in the mystical theology game, random one-syllable words for meditative focus, and the questions raised by authorial anonymity.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 44: Marisa Michaud on Colette of Corbie
The wonderful Marisa Michaud joins the podcast this week to tell us about the fascinating St Colette of Corbie (1381-1441). We talk about Franciscan reforms, Valois Burgundy, the joys of artistic depictions of mystics, and cherry-picking religious vocations!
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My Favourite Mystic 43: Elsa McDonald on Marguerite Porete
This week Elsa McDonald joins the podcast to speak about Marguerite Porete (c. 1250-1310), author of The Mirror of Simple Souls who was burned at the stake for heresy. We talk about why theology can be confusing, the contradiction between the views of the inquisitors and the spectators at her burning, careful reading of texts, and how impressive conviction is!
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My Favourite Mystic 42: Delphine Conzelmann on William of St-Thierry
Delphine Conzelmann joins AJ Langley to talk all about 12th century theologian William of St-Thierry (1085-1148). We discuss his "friendship" with Bernhard of Clairvaux, his conflict with Peter Abelard, the chest of Jesus, how we need to be better academic friends and reinstate academic infirmeries to deal with burnout and bound over our ideas.
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My Favourite Mystic 41: W. Ezekiel Goggin on Georges Bataille
CONTENT WARNING! This episode contains graphic descriptions of an image of a torture victim, as well as discussion of ableism, sexual assault, and self-harm.
This week W. Ezekiel Goggin (@w_ezekielgoggin) joins AJ Langley (@medievalmystics) to talk about the life and works of the man who said "The brother is my church": mystic & philosopher Georges Bataille (1897-1962). We talk confusion and contradiction, the existence of nothing, laughter in the face of oblivion, excess, and contemplating the wounds of torture victims.
Mysticism and Materialism in the Wake of German Idealism by W. Ezekiel Goggin and Sean Hannan is available now at: https://www.routledge.com/Mysticism-and-Materialism-in-the-Wake-of-German-Idealism/Goggin-Hannan/p/book/9780367546137
My Favourite Mystic 40: Sean Hannan on Meister Eckhart
Sean Hannan joins the podcast this week to tell AJ Langley all about Meister Eckhart (d. c. 1328). We talk about how little we know about him, even though we have a lot of his writings. We talk about the "now", becoming nothing, and sharing ground with God. We also talk about academics being honest about their agendas, how there is always room for academic disagreement, and how unfortunate it is to have mystics, and the medieval in general, co-opted by fascists.
Mysticism and Materialism in the Wake of German Idealism by W. Ezekiel Goggin and Sean Hannan is available now at: https://www.routledge.com/Mysticism-and-Materialism-in-the-Wake-of-German-Idealism/Goggin-Hannan/p/book/9780367546137
My Favourite Mystic 39: Jess Coulson on Godric of Finchale
Jess Coulson joins AJ Langley to discuss the English hermit and mystic Godric of Finchale (d. 1170). We talk about material objects inspiring visions, Christ coming out of the cross (both as a baby and a man), the hotline to the Virgin Mary, and how Godric was just a guy and comparing him to Saint Thomas of Canterbury just isn't fair.
My Favourite Mystic 38: Ed van der Molen on Marie de Maillé
Ed van der Molen and AJ Langley speak about the fourteenth-century French mystic and holy woman Marie de Maillé (1331-1414). We talk about chaste marriage and the benefits of marrying your childhood best friend. We also talk about the fine line between witches and saints, magical ointments, carts miraculously blocking roads, and how biographers should care about the content of visions (at least for the sake of historians).
My Favourite Mystic 37: Karl Shuve on Hildegard von Bingen
Hildegard von Bingen returns, this week as the favourite mystic of Karl Shuve, who joins AJ Langley to talk about her life, works, and manner of knowing. We talk about her relationships with her community, other women, and her scribe. We also talk about her preaching, her music, and her long legacy.
My Favourite Mystic 36: Erin Risch Zoutendam on Mechthild von Magdeburg
Erin Risch Zoutendam joins AJ Langley to discuss the German mystic and beguine Mechthild von Magdeburg (c. 1207-282). We talk about flowing light, getting on the Virgin Mary's level, poor girls getting nice clothes in heaven, and why being a human is better than being an angel.
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Erin Risch Zoutendam: @erin_zoutendam
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 35: Pablo Acosta-García on Juana de la Cruz
This week AJ Langley is joined by Pablo Acosta-García to discuss the Franciscan abbess, preacher, and mystic Juana de la Cruz (1481-1534). We talked about her mystical preaching, God's voice speaking through her body (in a deep register), a reader scandalised by God being compared to things, and how entertaining a sermon would have to be in order to keep audience's attention for six hours! We also chat about the need to view the mystics of the late-medieval period as interconnected, rather than separating them along regional lines, and the complex issue of translating an experience into words.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 34: Sam Dubbelman on Nicholas of Cusa
Sam Dubbelman joins this week to speak with AJ Langley about the German philosopher, mathematician, and mystical theologian Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464). We talk about how to know God, "learned ignorance", breaking down the wall of logic and reason, and that in the end it is always a leap of faith. We also talk about the power of good networks filled with good people. Shout out to the Cusanus Society (@CusanusSociety) and the Mystical Theology Network (@MysticTheology) for being so welcoming to new scholars.
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My Favourite Mystic 33: Ilona Gerbakher on Moses Maimonides
AJ Langley is joined by Ilona Gerbakher to talk about the Jewish philosopher (and mystic) Moses Maimonides (1138–1204). We discuss the influence of Sufi mysticism on his work, why he believed that Jews had lost the ability to achieve mystical connection, and how they could learn to get it back. We also discuss antinomianism and AJ's hypothetical reaction to public nudity.
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My Favourite Mystic 32: Sean Field on Margherita Colonna
AJ Langley is joined by Sean Field to discuss the visionary Margherita Colonna (c. 1255-1280). We discuss her Franciscan influences, her family connections (for better and worse), the differences between her two hagiographies, three year old Jesus taking up space, and being a teenage rebel in the thirteenth century. Also, bonus woman of note: Isabella of France!
If your interest in Margherita has been piqued, check out: Visions of Sainthood in Medieval Rome: The Lives of Margherita Colonna by Giovanni Colonna and Stefania (https://undpress.nd.edu/9780268102029/visions-of-sainthood-in-medieval-rome/)
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My Favourite Mystic 31: Joel Hecker on the Zohar
Host AJ Langley is joined this week by Joel Hecker to discuss the Zohar, an essential work of Jewish mystical thought. We discuss the complexity of its authorship, the concept of radiance, the difference between meditation and drugs, sex in mystical texts, and balancing an ascetic life with a wife and kids.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 30: Lydia Walker on Marie of Oignies
CW: Mentions of SA, self-mutilation, and removing teeth from a corpse
This week AJ Langley speaks to Lydia Walker (@LydiaMWalker) about Marie of Oignies (c. 1177-1213), a devout religious woman whose dedication to God earned her two hagiographers, Jacques de Vitry and Thomas of Cantimpré. We talk about the difference between the life she led and the priorities of her hagiographers, the discussion of "crusades" in her work, her vita as an exempla, and the bodily autonomy of (prospective) saints.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 29: Samuel Baudinette on Albert the Great
This week AJ Langley speaks to Samuel Baudinette about Albert the Great (d.1280), a German Dominican friar, philosopher, mystic, and accused sorcerer! We talk about the difference between a philosopher's comprehension of the divine and the beatitude of the Christian, his massive corpus of writings, his time walking around as bishop of Regensburg, and how being a man of means sometimes means that you can travel the countryside doing experiments.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 28: Subhasree Chakravarty on Khona
Content Warning: Domestic Abuse
This week AJ Langley speaks to Subhasree Chakravarty about the mathematic and mystic Khona. We discuss her sayings, poetic couplets, and advice for all areas of rural life. We also discuss disguising mathematical brilliance as mystical inspiration and calling out your father-in-law for being bad at his job.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 27: AJ Langley on Agnes Blannbekin
This week special guest host Robert Dickins interviews the regular host, AJ Langley about the mystic commonly known as Agnes Blannbekin. We discuss confession, anonymity of mystics, bodily reunification, and Christ's foreskin.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 26: John Arblaster on Jan van Ruusbroec
In this week's episode, AJ Langley speaks to John Arblaster about Jan van Ruusbroec (c. 1294-1381), an Augustinian Canon and prolific mystical writer. We talk about finding the time to write, the fourth step on the path to God, the ease of being labelled a heretic, and the transmission of ideas through religious communities.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 25: Jessica Barr on Gertrude of Helfta
In this week's episode, AJ Langley speaks to Jessica Barr about German nun, mystic, and author of The Herald of Divine Love, Gertrude of Helfta (1256-1302). We talk about the community of nuns at Helfta, her love of literature, her relationship with the Divine, how she decided to take her religious vocation more seriously (quite a while after she joined the convent..), the devotion to the sacred heart, and how hard it is to write about the ineffable.
Follow us on Twitter @myfavmystic, and if you are enjoying the podcast, rate and review us on your podcast app of choice!
My Favourite Mystic 24: Gemma Simmonds on Mary Ward
My Favourite Mystic 23: Samantha Slaubaugh on Douceline de Digne
In this week's episode AJ Langley speaks to Samantha Slaubaugh, PhD candidate in Liturgical Studies at the University of Notre Dame, about the complicated French beguine Douceline de Digne (1214-1274). We talked about Douceline's influential brother, Hugh of Digne, the strictness of her religious life, the importance of community, levitation during raptures, "testing" mystics, and changing up the liturgy when friars are singing the wrong song.
CW: assault (woman and child)
Follow us on Twitter:
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 22: Joseph Lumbard on Aḥmad al-Ghazālī
In this episode AJ Langley speaks to the Joseph Lumbard about Sufi mystic, writer, and preacher, Aḥmad al-Ghazālī. We talk about the metaphysics of love, getting ready for death, giving your older bother a crisis of faith and taking his job, and how hard it is to do research on people who think that your research is a waste of time. Also, near-death experiences, good teachers, and good books!
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Joseph Lumbard: @JosephLumbard
The Quran for all Seasons: https://pod.co/quran-for-all-seasons
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 21: Laura Varnam and Laura Kalas on Margery Kempe
In this episode AJ Langley speaks to the "Margery Kempe Lauras", Laura Varnam and Laura Kalas about the wonderous Margery Kempe, and their new volume Encountering The Book of Margery Kempe, out this month (November 2021) from Manchester University Press. We talk about how Kempe's work invites the reader in, her place among her mystical and religious contemporaries, toe fondling, pike-gate, and Jesus Christ breastfeeding within Margery's soul. We also get a complete run down of the table of contents of this exciting new volume!
You can order Encountering The Book of Margery Kempe from Manchester University Press (https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781526146601/) and use the code Kempe21 before January 31, 2022 for 40% off!
Follow us on Twitter:
Laura Varnam: @lauravarnam
Laura Kalas: @LauraKalas
The Margery Kempe Society: @MargerySociety
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 20: Travis Stevens on Beatrice of Nazareth
AJ Langley speaks to Travis Stevens about the Cistercian nun Beatrice of Nazareth (c. 1200-1268). We talk about distrust of hagiographers, lovesickness, absence, saying "yes and" to ecstasies, the role of the "housewife" in Beatrice's text, and how everyone need to "werk it". We also talk about how great Amy Hollywood is, about making mysticism "sexy" for undergrads, and about Travis's podcast about the history of the devil.
Travis Stevens is one of the hosts of "Seven Heads, Ten Horns: The History of the Devil". Listen on your favourite podcast app or at: https://redcircle.com/shows/seven-heads-ten-horns
Follow us on Twitter:
Travis Stevens: @arealtravis_tea
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 19: Dyan Elliott on Elzear and Delphine
AJ Langley speaks to Dyan Elliott of Northwestern University about the spiritual marriage of the fourteenth-century couple Elzear (d. 1323) and Delphine (d. 1358). We talk about the intense bond of their relationship, their canonisation procedures (aided by nepotism), the risks of being very into poverty in the 14th century, and how some visions were not intended for an audience.
Follow us on Twitter:
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 18: Louise Nelstrop on Richard Rolle
AJ Langley speaks to Louise Nelstrop about the fourteenth-century English hermit Richard Rolle. We talk about Rolle's popularity during the medieval period, his experiences of heat, sweetness, and song, his focus on calming the mind, and how true love is shouting it from the rooftops and forgetting when you first met.
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Louise Nelstrop: @nelstrop3
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 17: Hannah Johnson on Mechthild von Magdeburg
AJ Langley speaks to Hannah Victoria Johnson about the thirteenth-century beguine and mystic Mechthild von Magdeburg. We talk about love, suffering, sex grass, and Mecththild's desire to be below the Devil's ass-crack, all while Hannah attempts to convince listeners that Mechthild is easy to understand.
We also discuss our new "Envisioning Visions" project which aims to foster a fanart community around the visions of medieval mystics. For more information on the Envisioning Visions project, and to see the art that has been created so far, visit: https://envisioningvisions.wordpress.com
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Hannah Johnson: @medievannah
Envisioning Visions: @EnvisionVisions
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 16: Alexandra Verini on Mira Bai
AJ Langley speaks to Alexandra Verini about the sixteenth-century Hindu mystic Mira Bai. We discuss her marriage to Krishna (and denial of her worldly husband), her poetry, the disapproval of her in-laws, and the connections to be found between medieval mystics of all denominations.
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Alexandra Verini: @AlexandraVerini
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 15: Georgia van Raalte on Dion Fortune
AJ Langley speaks to Georgia van Raalte about the British occultist, spiritual advisor, and author Dion Fortune (1890-1946). We discuss her construction of British spiritualism, her rejection of Indian "Masters" in favour of British "Masters", how novels can stimulate mystical experiences, and Christian esotericism. CW: racism/eugenics and how the people we study are often quite problematic.
Georgia van Raalte has recently finished her PhD at the University of Surrey and her work focuses on Dion Fortune's occult novels.
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Georgia van Raalte: @RaalteGeorgia
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 14: Lydia Shahan on Hadewijch
AJ Langley speaks to Lydia Shahan about the 13th-century mystic, poet, and holy woman Hadewijch. A woman of mystery, we talk about how little is known about her life, about paradox, about desire, and about the joy of rendering a category useless.
Lydia Shahan is a second year PhD student in the Study of Religion at Harvard University. She looks are mysticism and devotional literature in the Low countries and Northern Europe.
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Lydia Shahan: @lydia_shahan
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 13: Liam Temple on Augustine Baker
AJ Langley speaks to Liam Temple about the mystical writer and Benedictine Augustine Baker (1575-1641). We discussed his conversion experience, his eagerness for a quiet life of contemplation, the repeated thwarting of that desire, his advise to nuns on achieving mystical contemplation, his understanding of the varieties of mysticism, and how anyone who criticises is a scholastic who just doesn't understand mystical experience.
Dr Liam Temple is Capuchin Fellow in the History of Catholicism at Durham University. His first book, Mysticism in Early Modern England, was published with Boydell and Brewer in 2019 and he has published widely on the influence of the Benedictine monk Augustine Baker and the role mysticism played in early modern English convents. His book can be ordered at: https://boydellandbrewer.com/9781783273935/mysticism-in-early-modern-england/
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Liam Temple: @LiamPeterTemple
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 12: Laury Silvers on Shawana
AJ Langley speaks to Dr Laury Silvers about the Sufi mystic Shawana (9th century). We discuss the challenges scholars face when trying to find early Islamic female mystics, the impact of regional history on the articulation of mysticism, Shawana's weeping, and Laury's transition from academia to writing historical fiction. (CW: references to slavery and sexual assault)
Laury Silvers is a retired professor of early Islamic mysticism, specialising in gender. She received her PhD from SUNY Stony Brook in 2002. Her work on mysticism and 10th-century Bagdad is the inspiration for her historical fiction series, The Sufi Mysteries. The first book, The Lover, follows Zaytuna as she is "forced to face the suffering of the most vulnerable in Baghdad and the emotional and mystical legacy of her mother, a famed ecstatic whose love for God eclipsed everything" as she seeks justice for the death of a local boy.
Check out The Sufi Mysteries at https://www.llsilvers.com/
Follow us on Twitter:
Laury Silvers: @waraqamusa
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 11: James Roberts on Mother Maria Skobtsova
AJ Langley speaks to James Roberts about the Russian Orthodox nun, social activist, theologian and writer Mother Maria Skobtsova (1891-1945). We talk about her theology and the mysticism of human communion, her mission to feed the poor (and her wheelbarrow full of vegetables), her involvement in the French resistance, our pity for her housemates, and her chain-smoking, philosophy parties.
James Roberts is, at time of recording, finishing up his PhD in modern theology at Oxford University, focusing on the theology of Mother Maria Skobtsova. He received both his Bachelors and Masters degrees in Divinity from the University of St Andrews. In addition to his academic work, he is currently involved in a number of interfaith projects.
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James Roberts: @JamerRoberts
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 10: Michael Hahn on Angela of Foligno
AJ Langley speaks to Michael Hahn about the lay penitent (Franciscan) mystic Angela of Foligno (d.1309). We discuss her importance as a theologian, her fear of damnation, her spiritual sons, the abyss, lots of screaming and weeping, and how family can get in the way of a religious life (CW: death of family discussed)
Michael Hahn is a theologian and medieval church historian. While his research and teaching has covered different aspects of the historical study of religion and spirituality, his main focus is on early-Franciscan mystical theologies: its different expressions; distinctive nature; and reception. He is currently Tutor in Divinity at the University of London where he teaches ‘The History of Christianity’ and has previously lectured at York St John University – where he designed and taught a module on ‘Mysticism in World Religions’ – and St Andrews, where he taught church history.
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Michael Hahn: @M_S_Hahn
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 9: Einat Klafter on Margery Kempe
AJ Langley speaks to Einat Klafter about the one and only Margery Kempe (c. 1373- after 1436). We discuss her pilgrimages, her co-authorship of her text, her sacralising of the mundane, and how she was just... a lot. (CW: depression and self-harm are discussed)
Einat Klafter is a co-director of the Exceptional Selves Humanities Lab at the Zvi Yavetz School of Historical Studies at Tel Aviv University, and co-founder of the Mysticism & Lived Experience Network (@mle_network). Her research interests include the mystic Margery Kempe, late-medieval devotion, sacred spaces, embodiment, lived experiences, sexuality and gender studies, and popular culture (both past and present). She is currently working on a project that examines how lived experience of late-medieval mystics impacts the conceptualization and articulation of mystical union with God.
Follow us on Twitter:
Michael Hahn: @medievalk
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 8: Lauren Cole on Hildegard von Bingen
AJ Langley speaks to Lauren Cole about the mystic, writer, and polymath Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179). We talk about her medical texts, the effect of the humors on reproduction, the use of Adam and Eve, and foaming semen. Brief asides into the "gatekeeping" of the designation of individuals as "mystics" and Lauren's call for everyone to join her on TikTok (@MedievalLauren).
Lauren Cole is an independent scholar who works on Hildegard of Bingen. Her primary research focus is on the relationship between Hildegard’s visionary theology and her medicine, which has not yet received much academic attention. She is particularly interested in gendered constructions of authority, the presentation of Adam and Eve, and the use of female embodiment in text and image throughout Hildegard’s works.
Lauren received her MA in History from the University of Bristol in 2018 and will start a PhD in Autumn 2021. She is passionate about public engagement and runs a TikTok account (@MedievalLauren) dedicated to busting myths about the Middle Ages and raising awareness of medieval female mystics. She is the founder of the hashtag #HildegardTok. She also has a blog that you can find at https://medievallauren.wordpress.com/
Notes and updates:
At the 4 minute mark, please note that Hildegard’s description of the female orgasm is the earliest surviving in the Western canon.
Follow us on Twitter:
My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
Lauren Cole: @MedievalLauren
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics
My Favourite Mystic 7: Jane Shaw on Evelyn Underhill
AJ Langley speaks to Jane Shaw about the mystic, writer, and spiritual advisor, Evelyn Underhill (1875-1941). We talk about her quest for authentic spirituality, her letters of spiritual advise (which are very funny and worth a read), her work as a retreat leader, and her ability to find a balance between spiritual and domestic life.
Jane Shaw is Professor of the History of Religion and Principal of Harris Manchester College at the University of Oxford (@HMCOxford). For more from Jane on Evelyn Underhill, you can read her book, Pioneers of Modern Spirituality: The neglected Anglican innovators of a 'spiritual but not religious' age (2017).
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My Favourite Mystic 6: Meagan Khoury on Catherine of Siena
AJ Langley speaks to Meagan Khoury about the lay Dominican mystic and holy woman Catherine of Siena (1347-1380). We talk about the "Miracoli", Catherine's "projects" (including her prolific letter writing campaigns), and her fixation on breasts and hearts.
Plus, as an added bonus, Meagan shares a bit about Saint Sarah (also called Sara la Kali) and her veneration in Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer.
Meagan Khoury is a doctoral student in Art History at Stanford University with a focus on female mystics, single women, and late medieval medical humanities. In her work, questions of queer embodiment, interiority, and female utopias are interrogated with the assistance of French feminist philosophers Simone de Beauvoir and Simone Weil.
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My Favourite Mystic: @myfavmystic
Meagan Khoury: @ArtemisiasJ
AJ Langley: @medievalmystics