Explore queer mysticism in medieval texts through the lens of mystical theology and poetry with Jamie Staples. Discover how mystical experiences in Christianity can offer resources to combat discrimination and hatred. Dive into the unconventional spiritual journey of Margery Kempe and the subversive potential of queer mysticism within Christianity.
Queer mysticism explores the blend of mysticism and queer identity, offering a transformative view on relationships with divinity.
Interpreting texts like the Song of Songs challenges traditional beliefs, providing an alternative perspective on eroticism and spirituality in Christianity.
Deep dives
Exploring Queer Mysticism through Medieval Literature
Queer mysticism is discussed as a concept that blends mysticism with queer identity. The guest, James Staples, shares his personal journey of self-acceptance through mystical literature, highlighting the transformative power of texts like St. John of the Cross's Dark Night of the Soul. Staples delves into the intersection of contemplation and meditation in mystical practices, emphasizing the role of erotic imagery in conveying spiritual experiences.
Unraveling the Interpretations of the Song of Songs
The podcast delves into the complexities of interpreting the Song of Songs in Christianity, emphasizing its allegorical value in medieval theology. The discussion explores how figures like Bernard of Clairvaux repurpose the text to describe mystical experiences, challenging traditional understandings of sexuality and spirituality. The narrative surrounding the Song of Songs showcases the evolving perceptions of eroticism and divine union in medieval religious discourse.
The Political Implications of Queer Mysticism
Queer mysticism is positioned as a subversive force within Christianity, offering a space for embracing queer identities within religious frameworks. The conversation extends to the political and practical implications of queer mysticism, highlighting its potential to challenge fundamentalist Christian rhetoric and power structures. By reimagining queerness as an erotic force for relationality and authenticity, queer mysticism presents a transformative vision that can reshape societal norms and catalyze communal resistance to oppressive systems.
We close Pride Month of 2023 with Jamie Staples talking about queer mysticism. This includes instances in medieval Christianity where an embodied and erotic experience of life, within and between persons, became the basis for an apprehension of divinity. The conversation particularly focuses on the poem “Dark Night of the Soul” by 16th century Spanish poet St. John of the Cross and the work of 14th-15th century English mystic Margery Kempe. Jamie shares his own story to show how queer mysticism can offer resources from within Christianity to build a personal and communitarian politics against fundamentalist discrimination and hatred.
Starting this fall, Jamie Staples will be Visiting Assistant Professor of Medieval English literature at Trinity College in Hartford. His research takes seriously the productive intersection of mystical theology and poetry in the development of alternative modes of critical thinking in the late Middle Ages. He's recently written two articles focused more specifically on the queer mysticism that he will be discussing today, one on the fifteenth-century Book of Margery Kempe, published in Romanic Review, and the other on the fourteenth-century poem Cleanness, published in Exemplaria.