god essay
This article argues that while Fleabag offers a powerful fem -inist critique of neoliberal society, it also presents an implicit reflection of the limits of feminism and advo -cates for a transcendent element in human relationships as the only adequate place to unburden affective excess.
File
On Fleabag
Neville,
David
O.
"The
Bodies
of
the
Bride:
The
Language
of
Incarnation,
Transcen-
dence,
and
Time
in
the
Poetic
Theology
of
Mechthild
of
Magdeburg."
Mystics
Quar-
terly.
Vol
34,
Nos.
1-2
(Jan-Apr
2008):
1-34.
David
O.
"The
Bodies
of
the
Bride:
The
Language
of
Incarnation,
Transcen-
dence,
and
Time
in
the
Poetic
Theology
of
Mechthild
of
Magdeburg."
Mystics
Quar-
terly.
Vol
34,
Nos.
1-2
(Jan-Apr
2008):
1-34.
JSTOR: Access Check
Hollywood,
Amy.
The
Soul
as
Virgin
Wife:
Mechthild
of
Magdeburg,
Marguerite
Porete
,
and
Meister
Eckhart.
Notre
Dame:
University
of
Notre
Dame
Press,
1995.
Amy.
The
Soul
as
Virgin
Wife:
Mechthild
of
Magdeburg,
Marguerite
Porete
,
and
Meister
Eckhart.
Notre
Dame:
University
of
Notre
Dame
Press,
1995.
JSTOR: Access Check
SOURCE
when
Mechthild's
mystical
theology
pairs
"the
heights
of
bliss"
with
"the
most
exquisite
pain,"
it
does
so
as
a
faithful
recipient
of
this
tradition,
in
which
love
and
pain
occupy
the
center
of
God's
relationship
to
humankind.
Ultimately,
those
who
are
scandalized
by
Mechthild's
wedding
of
erotic
and
painful
rhetoric
will
be
scandalized
by
what
has
become
the
heart
of
the
Christian
tradition,
as
well.
Mechthild's
mystical
theology
pairs
"the
heights
of
bliss"
with
"the
most
exquisite
pain,"
it
does
so
as
a
faithful
recipient
of
this
tradition,
in
which
love
and
pain
occupy
the
center
of
God's
relationship
to
humankind.
Ultimately,
those
who
are
scandalized
by
Mechthild's
wedding
of
erotic
and
painful
rhetoric
will
be
scandalized
by
what
has
become
the
heart
of
the
Christian
tradition,
as
well.
JSTOR: Access Check
the
most
important
question
of
all
remains
unanswered:
For
Mechthild,
why
does
union
with
the
Godhead,
the
only
One
who
is
able
to
comfort
and complete
the
soul,
produce
wounding
and
pain?
Certainly,
room
must
be
made
for
the
emphasis
of
medieval
scholasticism
upon
God
as
Wholly
Other
and
the
Aristotelian
notion
of
pain
as
the
aspect
of
bodily
existence
that
is
most
intimately
human.33
But,
for
many,
especially
fe... See more
most
important
question
of
all
remains
unanswered:
For
Mechthild,
why
does
union
with
the
Godhead,
the
only
One
who
is
able
to
comfort
and complete
the
soul,
produce
wounding
and
pain?
Certainly,
room
must
be
made
for
the
emphasis
of
medieval
scholasticism
upon
God
as
Wholly
Other
and
the
Aristotelian
notion
of
pain
as
the
aspect
of
bodily
existence
that
is
most
intimately
human.33
But,
for
many,
especially
fe... See more
JSTOR: Access Check
Mechthild's
poetic
texts
reveal
a
depth
of
theological
insight
that
situates
her
firmly
within
the
Christian
narrative
and
liturgical
tradition.
poetic
texts
reveal
a
depth
of
theological
insight
that
situates
her
firmly
within
the
Christian
narrative
and
liturgical
tradition.
JSTOR: Access Check
When
the
consumption
of
Christ's
body
in
the
Mass
brings
literal
nourishment
from,
and
intimacy
with
the
divine,
then
it
is
appropriate
to
understand
that
the
experience
of
pain
in
imitation
of
Christ
brings
pleasure
and
intimacy,
as
well.
the
consumption
of
Christ's
body
in
the
Mass
brings
literal
nourishment
from,
and
intimacy
with
the
divine,
then
it
is
appropriate
to
understand
that
the
experience
of
pain
in
imitation
of
Christ
brings
pleasure
and
intimacy,
as
well.
JSTOR: Access Check
For
medieval
women
mystics,
the
pursuit
and
embrace
of
physical
pain
became
a
focal
point
of
their
ascetic
religious
devotion
and
the
primary
means
by
which
they
experienced
union
with
God.
medieval
women
mystics,
the
pursuit
and
embrace
of
physical
pain
became
a
focal
point
of
their
ascetic
religious
devotion
and
the
primary
means
by
which
they
experienced
union
with
God.
JSTOR: Access Check
Mechthild
understands
that
fallen
humanity
is
brought
into
intimate
union
with
God
through
the
mediating
work
of
physical
•
23
pain
understands
that
fallen
humanity
is
brought
into
intimate
union
with
God
through
the
mediating
work
of
physical
•
23
pain