Catherine of Sienna
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Saint, mystic, Mamma. Activist, author, Doctor of the Church. These are some of the ways that the young Catherine di Benincasa would come to be remembered. After receiving visions of Christ when she was only a child, Catherine devoted herself to religious sacrifice, compelled by the knowledge that God had bigger plans for her. When her life of penitence and privation led her to join the Dominican Order, her piety soon began to earn her a following. And as news started to spread of the small miracles that surrounded her – like her levitation during prayer and her ability to restore the deathly ill – the church was ready to sit up and pay attention. The growing belief in Catherine's holiness gave her remarkable access to the inner sanctum of the patriarchal Catholic church, even to the Pope himself. But her spiritual devotion would eventually led to her demise, as her lifelong commitment to fasting and starvation ultimately took its toll on her. Join us as we return to 14th century Europe, far away from the battlefields of France to the solitude and reflection of Catherine of Siena.   Bell, Rudolph M. Holy Anorexia. The University of Chicago Press, 1985. Cavallini, Guiliana. Catherine of Siena. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2005. Egan, Jennifer. ‘Power Suffering’. The New York Times, 1999 https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/library/magazine/millennium/m2/egan.html Luongo, F Thomas. The Saintly Politics of Catherine of Siena. Cornell University Press, 2006. Walker Bynum, Caroline. Holy Feast and Holy Fast: The Religious Significance of Food to Medieval Women. The University of California Press, 1987. If you want to support Deviant Women, follow us on:  Patreon Twitter @DeviantWomen Facebook @deviantwomenpodcast Instagram @deviantwomenpodcast Deviant Women is recorded and produced on the lands of the Kaurna People and we pay respect to Elders past, present and emerging   See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
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