Introduction Amy Hollywood and Patricia Z. Beckman; Part I. Contexts: 1. Early monasticism Douglas Burton-Christie; 2. Song, experience, and the book in Benedictine monasticism Amy Hollywood; 3. New religious movements in medieval western Europe Walter Simons; 4. Early modern reformations Edward Howells; Part II. Key Terms: 5. Apophatic and cataphatic theology Andrew Louth; 6. Lectio divina E. Ann Matter; 7. Meditatio/meditation Thomas Bestul; 8. Oratio/prayer Rachel Fulton Brown; 9. Visio/vision Veerle Fraeters; 10. Raptus/rapture Dyan Elliott; 11. Unio mystica/mystical union Bernard McGinn; 12. Actio et contemplatio/action and contemplation Charlotte Radler; Part III. Contemporary Questions: 13. Latin and the vernaculars Barbara Newman; 14. Transmission Sara S. Poor; 15. Writing Charles M. Stang; 16. The body and its senses Patricia Dailey; 17. Mysticism and visuality Jeffrey Hamburger; 18. Emotions Fiona Somerset; 19. Authority Mary Frohlich; 20. Gender Alison Weber; 21. Sexuality Constance Furey; 22. Time and memory Patricia Dailey.
A multi-authored, interdisciplinary guide to the study of Christian mysticism, with an emphasis on the third through the seventeenth centuries.
Amy Hollywood is Elizabeth H. Monrad Professor of Christian Studies at Harvard Divinity School. She is the author of The Soul as Virgin Wife: Mechthild of Magdeburg, Marguerite Porete, and Meister Eckhart (1995); Sensible Ecstasy: Mysticism, Sexual Difference, and the Demands of History (2002) and Acute Melancholia and Other Essays (forthcoming). She has written widely on topics medieval and modern and is currently engaged in a historical, philosophical and theological exploration of enthusiasm in the modern West. She is also the editor of the Gender, Theory and Religions series for Columbia University Press and on the editorial board for the University of Chicago Press's Religion and Postmodernity series. Patricia Z. Beckman teaches in the Department of Religion and the Great Conversation program at St Olaf College. Her research and writing explore medieval women's mystical teaching and practice, especially Mechthild of Magdeburg's. She serves on the Council of the American Society of Church History and has worked as senior fellow for the Ford Foundation Difficult Dialogues project. She is an advocate for the public understanding, discussion and debate of all things religious and historical.
Advanced Praise: “A far-ranging collection of essays by leading
scholars in the field, particularly appealing for its attention to
definitions and aspects of current scholarly interest. A Companion
that goes far to take the mystification out of Christian
mysticism.” – Robert E. Lerner, Northwestern University
“With its comprehensive choice of topics and its historical scope,
this superb volume is much more than a handbook. It is a place
where Christian mysticism will be rediscovered through the multiple
voices that are collected here. All of them are acute in the
analyses of key terms, concepts, and historical developments – and
all of them stimulate further conversation about these essential
topics in intellectual and cultural history.” – Niklaus Largier,
University of California at Berkeley
“A brilliant array of scholars addresses the complex and varied
phenomena gathered under the rubric ‘Christian mysticism.’ Both
insisting that historical specificity matters and situating these
ancient, medieval, and early modern texts in twenty-first- century
conversations, this volume truly and profoundly demonstrates what
editor Amy Hollywood asserts: the study of mysticism is indeed
‘endless.’” – Carolyn Dinshaw, New York University
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