The Classical Ideas Podcast
Gregory Soden
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Top 10 The Classical Ideas Podcast Episodes
Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best The Classical Ideas Podcast episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to The Classical Ideas Podcast for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite The Classical Ideas Podcast episode by adding your comments to the episode page.
EP 235: New Rome: The Empire in the East w/Dr. Paul Stephenson
The Classical Ideas Podcast
04/07/22 • 50 min
Paul Stephenson is a historian of late antiquity and the author of New Rome: The Empire in the East and Constantine: Roman Emperor, Christian Victor.
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EP 245: Roman Catacombs w/Dr. William "Chip" Gruen
The Classical Ideas Podcast
07/02/22 • 52 min
Dr. William "Chip" Gruen is professor of religious studies at Muhlenberg College and is Director of the Institute for Religious and Cultural Understanding.
The Reception of Jesus in the First Three Centuries (2019)
https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/reception-of-jesus-in-the-first-three-centuries-9780567000194/
Religionwise Podcast: https://www.muhlenberg.edu/religionandculture/religionwisepodcast/
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EP 256: The Magi w/Dr. Eric Vanden Eykel
The Classical Ideas Podcast
11/26/22 • 49 min
George Tyrrell insisted that the quest for the historical Jesus was no more than scholars staring into a well to see their own reflections staring back. Jesus is the mirror image of those who study him. A similar phenomenon accompanies the quest for the historical Magi, those mysterious travelers who came from theEast, following a star to Bethlehem.
In this work, ancient historian and scholar Eric Vanden Eykel helps readers better understand both the Magi and the ancient and modern interpreters who have tried to study them. He shows how, from a mere twelve verses in the Gospel of Matthew, a varied and vast literary and artistic tradition was born. The Magi examines the birth of the Magi story;its enrichments, embellishments, and expansions in apocryphal writing and early Christian preaching;its artistic expressions in catacombs, icons, and paintings and its modern legacy in novels, poetry, and music.
Throughout, the book explores the fascination the Magi story elicits in both ancient and modern readers and what the legacy of the Magi story tells us about its storytellers--and ourselves.
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EP 286: Political Organizing and Teaching about Theology w/Reverend Naomi Washington-Leapheart
The Classical Ideas Podcast
02/15/24 • 30 min
Rev. Naomi Washington-Leapheart is a Black queer preacher, teacher, public administrator, and justice advocate. She is an adjunct professor of theology and religious studies at Villanova University and the Government Fellow for Religion and Public Life at Harvard Divinity School. In 2021, Rev. Naomi founded Salt | Yeast | Light, an organization that develops spaces of spiritual education, disruption, reflection, transformation, and public action.
Visit Sacred Writes: https://www.sacred-writes.org/luce-cohort-summer-2023
Visit Reverend Naomi Washington-Leapheart:
https://twitter.com/oholyshift
https://www.instagram.com/oholyshift/
https://linktr.ee/heartleaps?fbclid=IwAR0KBxltXNIzvz1JYA_CmaXLj425I-Rn2YZqcjBSu3Ay50yFH5om-fqtrB8
EP 102: Santa Muerte w/ Dr. Andrew Chesnut
The Classical Ideas Podcast
03/24/19 • 58 min
Dr. Andrew Chesnut earned his Ph.D degree in Latin American History from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1995 and joined the History Department faculty at the University of Houston in 1997. He quickly became an internationally recognized expert on Latin American religious history. Professor Chesnut was selected as the inaugural recipient of the Bishop Walter Sullivan Chair in Catholic Studies at VCU in 2008. Professor Chesnut’s early work, Born Again in Brazil: The Pentecostal Boom and the Pathogens of Poverty (Rutgers University Press, 1997), traces the meteoric rise of Pentecostalism among the popular classes in Brazil following the disestablishment of the Roman Catholic Church. His second book, Competitive Spirits: Latin America’s New Religious Economy (Oxford University Press, 2003) focuses on the three groups that have prospered most in the region’s pluralist landscape, Protestant Pentecostalism, the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, and African disasporic religions (e.g., Brazilian Candomble and Haitian Vodou). Professor Chesnut's most recent book is Devoted to Death: Santa Muerte, the Skeleton Saint (Oxford University Press, 2012). It is the first in-depth study of the Mexican folk saint in English and has received widespread media coverage.
Follow Dr. Andrew Chesnut on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/AndrewChesnut1
Visit: https://skeletonsaint.com/
Buy Devoted to Death: https://www.amazon.com/Devoted-Death-Santa-Muerte-Skeleton/dp/0190633336/ref=sr_1_fkmrnull_1?keywords=Devoted+to+Death%3A+Santa+Muerte%2C+the+Skeleton+Saint&qid=1553112579&s=gateway&sr=8-1-fkmrnull
Ep 110: Exorcism w/Dr. Kate Kingsbury and Dr. Andrew Chesnut
The Classical Ideas Podcast
04/25/19 • 56 min
Dr. Kate Kingsbury obtained her doctorate in Anthropology from Oxford University. She is an Adjunct Professor at the University of Alberta where she teaches anthropology courses such as Introduction to Anthropology, Anthropology of Religion and Ethnographic Field Methods.
Kate Kingsbury on Academia.edu
Follow Kate Kingsbury on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ProfKingsbury
Dr. Andrew Chesnut earned his Ph.D degree in Latin American History from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1995 and joined the History Department faculty at the University of Houston in 1997. He quickly became an internationally recognized expert on Latin American religious history. Professor Chesnut was selected as the inaugural recipient of the Bishop Walter Sullivan Chair in Catholic Studies at VCU in 2008. Professor Chesnut’s early work, Born Again in Brazil: The Pentecostal Boom and the Pathogens of Poverty (Rutgers University Press, 1997), traces the meteoric rise of Pentecostalism among the popular classes in Brazil following the disestablishment of the Roman Catholic Church. His second book, Competitive Spirits: Latin America’s New Religious Economy (Oxford University Press, 2003) focuses on the three groups that have prospered most in the region’s pluralist landscape, Protestant Pentecostalism, the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, and African disasporic religions (e.g., Brazilian Candomble and Haitian Vodou). Professor Chesnut's most recent book is Devoted to Death: Santa Muerte, the Skeleton Saint (Oxford University Press, 2012). It is the first in-depth study of the Mexican folk saint in English and has received widespread media coverage.
Follow Dr. Andrew Chesnut on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/AndrewChesnut1
Visit: https://skeletonsaint.com/
Buy Devoted to Death by Andrew Chesnut:
Further reading on exorcism:
Driving Out the Devil from Catholic Herald
https://www.patheos.com/blogs/theglobalcatholicreview/2018/04/exorcising-the-demons-of-africa/ https://www.patheos.com/blogs/theglobalcatholicreview/2018/08/why-is-exorcism-all-the-rage/EP 287: Moon of the Turning Leaves w/Waubgeshig Rice
The Classical Ideas Podcast
02/17/24 • 43 min
In this gripping stand-alone literary thriller set in the world of the award-winning post-apocalyptic novel Moon of the Crusted Snow, a scouting party led by Evan Whitesky ventures into unknown and dangerous territory to find a new home for their close-knit Northern Ontario Indigenous community more than a decade after a world-ending blackout.
For the past twelve years, a community of Anishinaabe people have made the Northern Ontario bush their home in the wake of the power failure that brought about societal collapse. Since then they have survived and thrived the way their ancestors once did, but their natural food resources are dwindling, and the time has come to find a new home.
Evan Whitesky volunteers to lead a mission south to explore the possibility of moving back to their original homeland, the “land where the birch trees grow by the big water” in the Great Lakes region. Accompanied by five others, including his daughter Nangohns, an expert archer, Evan begins a journey that will take him to where the Anishinaabe were once settled, near the devastated city of Gibson, a land now being reclaimed by nature.
But it isn’t just the wilderness that poses a threat: they encounter other survivors. Those who, like the Anishinaabe, live in harmony with the land, and those who use violence.
EP 285: Jewish Cemeteries at the US Border w/Dr. Maxwell Greenberg
The Classical Ideas Podcast
02/08/24 • 59 min
Maxwell Greenberg (he/they) | (Assistant Professor of Judaic Studies in the Department of Cultural Studies at Goucher College) is an interdisciplinary scholar and educator who researches and teaches about race, religion, gender, and place. He earned his PhD in Chicana/o and Central American Studies from UCLA (2021), before serving as the Friedman Postdoctoral Fellow in Jewish Studies at Washington University in St. Louis (2021-23). He works at the intersection of Jewish, Religious and Indigenous Studies, and is particularly interested in how Judaism and Jewish memory function as unstable tools of statecraft in the US. Greenberg is passionate about building community with a network of scholars, artists and organizers who engage with religion as a connective tool for coalition building with movements to end racism and transmisogyny.
Visit Sacred Writes: https://www.sacred-writes.org/luce-cohort-summer-2023
Ep 7: Brahma and Sarasvati (Hindu Creation)
The Classical Ideas Podcast
09/01/17 • 10 min
This episode features the Hinduism creation story. The story features Brahma, the creator god, and Sarasvati, the goddess of knowledge, wisdom, music, and art.
EP 314: Liminal Spaces of Indian American Christianity and Indian Flag at the Capitol Insurrection w/Binu Varghese
The Classical Ideas Podcast
09/19/24 • 34 min
Binu 'Ben' Varghese is a PhD student in religion and society at Princeton Theological Seminary. His research focuses on intersections of race, politics, and religion among Indian diasporas in transnational contexts. He draws his theoretical formulations from the colonial history of Dutch slavery in India and alternative readings of Indian American history and memories. In addition to his research project, Binu is also interested in religion and capitalism, and religious nationalisms in India and America. He is currently serving as the editorial assistant of the Journal of World Christianity. His upcoming research essay is titled “Liminality as Decoloniality: Decolonizing Indian American Christianity,” which will be published in The Routledge Handbook of Politics and Religion in Contemporary America. We also discuss “Indian Flag at the Capitol Insurrection and ANti blackness among Indian Christians” from the Berkeley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs.
Visit Sacred Writes: https://www.sacred-writes.org/luce-cohort-summer-2024
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FAQ
How many episodes does The Classical Ideas Podcast have?
The Classical Ideas Podcast currently has 319 episodes available.
What topics does The Classical Ideas Podcast cover?
The podcast is about Religion & Spirituality, Podcasts and Education.
What is the most popular episode on The Classical Ideas Podcast?
The episode title 'EP 235: New Rome: The Empire in the East w/Dr. Paul Stephenson' is the most popular.
What is the average episode length on The Classical Ideas Podcast?
The average episode length on The Classical Ideas Podcast is 51 minutes.
How often are episodes of The Classical Ideas Podcast released?
Episodes of The Classical Ideas Podcast are typically released every 6 days, 23 hours.
When was the first episode of The Classical Ideas Podcast?
The first episode of The Classical Ideas Podcast was released on Aug 8, 2017.
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