Risking Enchantment

Rachel Sherlock

Risking Enchantment is a discussion about beauty in art and culture, and its place in the Catholic faith. The show is hosted by Rachel Sherlock, and she is joined every week by a friend to dive into a particular theme or topic. We discuss literature, music, poetry, art, architecture and more, and talk about how experiencing these can hint at the transcendental and better inform our Catholic faith and how we live it out.

  • 1 hour 4 minutes
    Painting with Sunlight: The Stained Glass Art of Harry Clarke

    “The glory of colour, which was his chief gift, is a strange blend of dark beauty and almost spectral luminosity.” - A.Kelly

     

    In this episode Rachel and Phoebe put a spotlight on one of Ireland’s great artists: Harry Clarke. Famed for his stained glass art, Clarke’s work can be found in churches throughout Ireland, exhibiting his astounding use of colour and his distinctive figurative style. We discuss his place in Irish art history and his work establishing a distinctively Irish style in the 20th century. We contrast his religious work with his secular, often literary based pieces, and his use of gothic and grotesque elements in both. And we discuss how Clarke’s distinctive style draws the humanity out in his depictions of saints and his biblical scenes.

     

    Music: Ashton Manor by Kevin MacLeod

     

    Hosts: Rachel Sherlock, Phoebe Watson

     

    Follow me on social media: @seekingwatson

     

    Follow the podcast on Instagram: @riskingenchantmentpodcast

     

    Find out more at www.rachelsherlock.com

     

    Sign up for our email list at www.rachelsherlock.com/podcast

     

     Works Mentioned:

     

    To see the stained glass pieces discussed in this episode, visit the Risking Enchantment Substack.

    Dark Beauty: Hidden Detail in Harry Clarke’s Stained Glass by Lucy Costigan and Michael Cullen

     

    Poems / by Theodore Maynard ; with an introduction by G.K. Chesterton

     

    Alarms and Discursions by G.K.Chesterton

     

    Orthodoxy by G.K Chesterton

     

    What We’re Enjoying at the Moment

     

    Phoebe: Murder on the Orient Express (on stage)

     

    Rachel: A Spring Harvest by Geoffrey Bache Smith

    30 April 2025, 8:45 pm
  • 1 hour 44 minutes
    In Defence of Frodo: The Trial and Heroism of Self-Sacrifice

    "I tried to save the Shire, and it has been saved, but not for me. It must often be so, Sam, when things are in danger: some one has to give them up, lose them, so that others may keep them."

    - J.R.R. Tolkien, The Return of the King

    In this episode, Jacob Moran returns to join me on a dive back into Middle-Earth, this time to explore the character of Frodo Baggins. Even among fans of The Lord of the Rings, Frodo comes in for a deal of criticism and even maligning, usually centred around his likeability and his failure at the end of the quest. Yet to misunderstand Frodo is to misunderstand a crucial part of what Tolkien is saying about heroism and virtue. In this episode Rachel and Jacob discuss Frodo's qualities, his example of self-sacrifice and his willingness to lay down even his likeability in order to save his friends and his home.

    Hosts: Rachel Sherlock and Jacob Moran

    Follow me on social media: @seekingwatson

    Follow the podcast on Instagram: @riskingenchantmentpodcast

    Find out more at www.rachelsherlock.com

    Sign up for our email list at www.rachelsherlock.com/podcast

    Works Mentioned:

    The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien

    The Two Towers by J.R.R. Tolkien

    The Return of the King by J.R.R. Tolkien

    The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, ed Humphrey Carpenter

    The Once and Future King by T.H. White

    The Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling

    Murder in the Cathedral by T.S. Eliot

     

    What We're Enjoying at the Moment:

    Rachel: Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens

    Jacob: DnD campaign planning

     

    14 March 2025, 6:19 pm
  • 1 hour 33 minutes
    Strange Desire and the Mystery of Love in the Music of Bleachers

    "I was feeling like I never was young

    Followed a dream and a strange desire

    You picked me up in the dead of the night

    And gave me a chance to move on inside of your mystery"

    - You're Still a Mystery, Bleachers

     

    In this February episode of Risking Enchantment, Matthias Conroy joins after a five year absence to talk about one of our favourite bands and albums, Strange Desire by Bleachers.

    Bleachers is founded and fronted by pop producer extraordinaire Jack Antonoff. While he is most famous for his work co-writing and producing the music of Taylor Swift, Lana Del Rey and The 1975, Jack’s band Bleachers gives him the space to explore emotions and experiences close to his heart, namely love, grief, sorrow and hope. While in no way a Christian album, Strange Desire gives a depth of wisdom to the experience of love that gives us glimpses of divine love. Even the album’s title ‘Strange Desire’ has an almost Augustinian quality, hinting at our restless hearts yearning for the world beyond our senses. In the episode we discuss and explore the themes of the album and show how we can encounter God in unlikely places in our life and in our culture.

     

    Music: Ashton Manor by Kevin MacLeod

    Hosts: Rachel Sherlock, Phoebe Watson

    The Risking Enchantment Substack account: https://riskingenchantment.substack.com/

    Follow me on social media: @seekingwatson

    Follow the podcast on Instagram: @riskingenchantmentpodcast

    Find out more at www.rachelsherlock.com

    Sign up for our email list at www.rachelsherlock.com/podcast

    For links to the works mentioned in this podcast, visit our substack post below:

    https://riskingenchantment.substack.com/p/strange-desire-and-the-mystery-of

    What We’re Enjoying at the Moment:

    Matthias:

    David Bennet Piano - YouTube Channel

    Rachel:

    A Father Who Keeps His Promises by Scott Hahn

    8 February 2025, 2:30 pm
  • 1 hour 15 minutes
    The Voice of One Crying in the Wilderness: John the Baptist, an Imaginative Exploration

    "[T]he life and work of the Forerunner, especially as presented in the gospel of John, greatly illuminates the poetic character of Christian life—indeed of all life"

    - Dwight Lindley, "The Poetics of John the Baptist"

     

    Risking Enchantment is back for 2025 and for our first episode of the year we’re taking a look at St. John the Baptist. We discuss a fictionalised depiction of his imprisonment by Henriette Brey, a 20th-century Catholic writer, as well at looking at how this foremost of saints is represented in art and how his very life and divine mission gives us a lens to understand art from a Christian perspective.

    Music: Ashton Manor by Kevin MacLeod

    Hosts: Rachel Sherlock, Phoebe Watson

    Important Links:

     

    Follow me on social media: @seekingwatson

    Follow the podcast on Instagram: @riskingenchantmentpodcast

    Find out more at www.rachelsherlock.com

    Sign up for our email list at www.rachelsherlock.com/podcast

     

    Works Mentioned

     

    “Out of the Depths” When The Soul Is In Darkness: A Book For Those That Labor And Are Burdened by Henriette Brey

     

    “The Lovesong of J. Alfred Prufrock” by T.S. Eliot

     

    “The Poetics of John the Baptist”, by Dwight Lindley - Dappled Things

     

    L’Apparition by Gustave Moreau

     

    Isenheim Altarpiece by Matthias Grunewald

     

    John the Baptist by Donatello (V&A Hall of Casts)

     

    Saint John the Baptist by Leonardo da Vinci

     

    Bacchus by Leonardo da Vinci

     

    What We’re Enjoying at the Moment

     

    Phoebe: Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens

      12 Angry Men

     

    Rachel: When Harry Met Sally

      Word on Fire Bible Series

     

    11 January 2025, 9:37 am
  • 30 minutes 40 seconds
    The Ends of the Affairs: Medieval Ideals, Modern Trysts and the Offering of Redemption in the Works of Graham Greene and T. H. White

    "I can imagine that if there existed a God who loved, the devil would be driven to destroy even the weakest, most faulty imitation of that love. Wouldn’t he be afraid that the habit of love might grow, and wouldn’t he try to trap us all into being traitors, into helping him extinguish love."

    - Graham Greene

     

    This episode of Risking Enchantment features a recording of paper given by Rachel Sherlock at this year's Fall Conference held by the de Nicola Institute for Ethics in Culture in Notre Dame University, held in conjuction with the Biennial Catholic Imagination Conference. the theme was Ever Ancient, Ever New: On Catholic Imagination. The focus of the conference was on the literary arts and so this paper was part of a panel on the author Graham Greene.

     

    Host: Rachel Sherlock

    Follow Rachel on social media: @seekingwatson

    Follow the podcast on Instagram: @riskingenchantmentpodcast

    Find out more at www.rachelsherlock.com

    Find out more about the conference: https://ethicscenter.nd.edu/programs/fall-conference/2024-ever-ancient-ever-new/

    Sign up for our email list at www.rachelsherlock.com/podcast

    Music: Ashton Manor by Kevin MacLeod

    9 November 2024, 4:49 pm
  • 1 hour 12 minutes
    An Integrated Faith: Tolkien’s Catholicism in his Life and Work with Holly Ordway

    “I am not a reformer nor an embalmer! I am not a ‘reformer’ (by exercise of power) since it seems doomed to Sarumanism. But ‘embalming’ has its own punishments.”

    -J.R.R. Tolkien

     

    For this episode we are delighted to be joined by Dr. Holly Ordway, Fellow of Faith and Culture at the Word on Fire Institute. We discuss her recent title, Tolkien's Faith: A Spiritual Biography, which traces Tolkien’s experience of the Catholic faith throughout his life, how he integrated it into his daily practices, his personal life and his work. We discuss his early religious experiences, his opinions on changes in the liturgy, and the ways he integrated his work and faith in his translation work especially on the Book of Jonah.



    Hosts: Rachel Sherlock, Dr Holly Ordway

     

    Follow Rachel on social media: @seekingwatson

     

    Follow Holly on social media: @HollyOrdway

     

    Follow the podcast on Instagram: @riskingenchantmentpodcast

     

    Find out more at www.rachelsherlock.com

     

    Find out more about Holly at http://www.hollyordway.com/

     

    Sign up for our email list at www.rachelsherlock.com/podcast

     

    Music: Ashton Manor by Kevin MacLeod

     

     

    Works Mentioned

     

    Tolkien’s Faith: A Spiritual Biography by Dr Holly Orday

    Tolkien’s Modern Reading: Middle-earth Beyond the Middle Ages by Dr Holly Ordway

    The Letters of J.R.R Tolkien

    Tolkien and the Great War by John Garth



    What We’re Enjoying at the Moment

    Holly: The Three Investigators Series by Robert Arthur, Jr.

    Rachel: The End of the Affair by Graham Greene

     

    22 September 2024, 2:31 pm
  • 1 hour 23 minutes
    Extraordinary Virtue in Every-Day Stories: Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell

    “I'm capable of a great jerk, an effort, and then a relaxation—but steady, every-day goodness is beyond me. I must be a moral kangaroo!”

    -Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell

     

    In our final episode before the summer break, Phoebe and Rachel are joined by their good friend, and long-time Risking Enchantment listener, Jacob Moran, to discuss his favourite novel: Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell. We discuss how Gaskell demonstrates the precariousness of the moral life, even or perhaps especially in middle class and comfortable lives. The novel highlights the need to cultivate every-day virtue and how easily we can stray from our principles. We explore these themes through the various contrasting characters, including Molly Gibson with her steadfast virtue in difficult circumstances, her step-mother Mrs Gibson with all her facade of care.

    We hope you enjoy the summer and we look forward to returning with more Risking Enchantment episodes in September.

    Hosts: Rachel Sherlock, Phoebe Watson, Jacob Moran

    Follow us on social media: Rachel: @seekingwatson Jacob: @piousmouse

    Follow the podcast on Instagram: @riskingenchantmentpodcast

    Find out more at www.rachelsherlock.com

    Sign up for our email list at www.rachelsherlock.com/podcast

     

    Works Mentioned:

    Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell

    North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell

    Cranford by Elizabeth Gaskell

    Keeping Your Word: Unfashionable Virtues in North and South - Risking Enchantment

    ‘Advice’ by Robert Crawford

     

    What We’re Enjoying at the Moment

    Collective Recommendation: 

    The Spectacular Failure of the Star Wars Hotel - Jenny Nicholson

    Phoebe:

    Murder in the Cathedral by T.S. Eliot - performed by CityLit Theatre, Chicago

    Rachel:

    Wildcat (2023)

    Jacob:

    Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel

    8 June 2024, 7:10 am
  • 1 hour 16 minutes
    The Creation of Music and the Music of Creation with Katie Marquette

    “Joyful singing and music is likewise a constant invitation to believers and to all people of good will to work hard to give humanity a future rich in hope.”

    -Pope Benedict XVI

     

    In this episode we are joined by Katie Marquette, host of the Born of Wonder podcast. We discuss our love of music, what can learn about the human desire to write new songs about our common experiences, and how participating in the creation of music unites us to the music imbued in God’s creation.



    Music: Ashton Manor by Kevin MacLeod

     

    Hosts: Rachel Sherlock, Katie Marquette

     

    Listen to Katie’s podcast: Born of Wonder

     

    Follow Rachel on social media: @seekingwatson

     

    Follow Katie on social media: @bornofwonder

     

    Read Katie on Substack: https://bornofwonder.substack.com/

     

    Follow the podcast on Instagram: @riskingenchantmentpodcast

     

    Find out more at www.rachelsherlock.com

     

    Sign up for our email list at www.rachelsherlock.com/podcast

     

    Join Katie Marquette on a pilgrimage to Ireland: https://www.bornofwonder.com/come-to-ireland-with-me

     

    Rachel was also previously a guest on the Born of Wonder podcast. To listen to that episode, click here: S7:10 EP102: Taylor Swift and the Power of Collective Experience with Rachel Sherlock

     

    Works Referenced:

    Music is fundamentally joy, says this professor of music

    What about Bad Music?

    Pope Benedict XVI and The Power of Music

    The Silmarillion by J.R.R. Tolkien

    The Magician’s Nephew by C.S. Lewis

    Recomposed by Max Richter: Vivaldi – The Four Seasons

     

    What We’re Enjoying at the Moment

    Katie: Les Misérables [Katie’s recent episode on this topic: S7:12 EP 104: The Economy of Love in Les Miserables with Maddie Dobrowski]

    Rachel: Detectorists

    7 May 2024, 8:50 pm
  • 1 hour 41 minutes
    Publishing Catholic Voices with Mary Finnegan, Deputy Editor at Wiseblood Books

    "We are watchful for works written in a contemporary idiom that yet reach the roots of fundamental questions, that honor the almost three-thousand-year-long conversations committed to these questions, and that incite our hunger for the splendor of truth."

    Masthead for Wiseblood Books

    We are delighted to welcome to the podcast Mary Finnegan, deputy editor at Wiseblood Books, a small Catholic press which fosters works of fiction, poetry, and philosophy. In our episode today we discuss the process of publishing, how to strive for excellent in craft while encouraging new writers, and publishing as a vocation. We dive into Dana Gioia's essay "The Catholic Writer Today" and address the problems facing Catholic writing and publishing in our current times.

    Hosts: Rachel Sherlock, Mary Finnegan

    Follow us on social media: @seekingwatson @maryraphaela

    Follow the podcast on Instagram: @riskingenchantmentpodcast

    Find out more at www.rachelsherlock.com

    Sign up for our email list at www.rachelsherlock.com/podcast

    Music: Ashton Manor by Kevin MacLeod

     

    Wiseblood Books: https://www.wisebloodbooks.com/

    University of St Thomas: Masters in Fine Arts in Creative Writing

    Dappled Things: https://www.dappledthings.org/

     

    Works Mentioned

    "The Catholic Writer Today" by Dana Gioia - Article in First Things

    The Catholic Writer Today by Dana Gioia - Monograph by Wiseblood

    Mystery and Manners by Flannery O'Connor

    "Christianity and Poetry" by Dana Gioia - Article in First Things

    Christianity and Poetry by Dana Gioia - Monograph by Wiseblood

    Under Satan's Sun by Georges Bernanos

    The Demons: A Double-Volume Novel by Heimito von Doderer

    Seneca: The Madness of Hercules, Translated and Introduced by Dana Gioia 

    Memory's Abacus: Poems by Anna Lewis

    Painting Over the Growth Chart: Poems, by Dan Rattelle

    Works of Mercy by Sally Thomas 

    How to Think Like a Poet by Ryan Wilson

     

    What We're Enjoying at the Moment

    "A Theology of Fiction" by Cassandra Nelson

    The End of the Affair by Graham Greene

     

    18 April 2024, 1:33 pm
  • 1 hour 1 minute
    The Spirit of Adventure in Swallows and Amazons

    “What does the Lord want of me?  Of course, this is always a great adventure, but life can be successful only if we have the courage to be adventurous, trusting that the Lord will never leave me alone, that the Lord will go with me and help me.”

        – Pope Benedict XVI



    For this episode of Risking Enchantment, Rachel and Phoebe discuss Arthur Ransome’s series of children’s books known as the Swallows and Amazons series. These books are full of wonder and imagination as well as practical detail, as they follow a group of children spending their holidays in the Lake District of northern England. The children sail, set up camp, climb mountains and have many delightful adventures. In our podcast discussion we explore the importance of this sense of adventure for both children and adults, and how this relates to our spiritual lives and how we embrace God’s plan for us. We discuss the balance of duty and responsibility with the sense of freedom that this kind of adventuring perspective brings, and we highlight the connection with Creation that can come from being out in nature.

     

    Works mentioned in this episode

    Swallows and Amazons by Arthur Ransome

    Swallowdale by Arthur Ransome

    Winter Holiday by Arthur Ransome

    The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien

    Matilda by Roald Dahl

    ‘Swallows and Amazons for Ever!’ Slightly Foxed, by Jim Ring

    Spe Salvi by Pope Benedict XVI

    “Encounter of His Holiness Benedict XVI with the Youth, Saint Peter's Square, Thursday, 6 April 2006”

    S2:9 EP18: Wonder in a Digital Age, Born of Wonder podcast

    “Swallows, Amazons and Adventure, Part 1” by Jon Sparks

    “Oxford Junior Dictionary’s replacement of ‘natural’ words with 21st-century terms sparks outcry”, The Guardian, Alison Flood

     

    What We’re Enjoying at the Moment:

    Phoebe: BBC’s Hildegard von Bingen - In Portrait (1994)

    Rachel: Knitting

    30 March 2024, 3:21 pm
  • 1 hour 19 minutes
    The Great Expectations and Romantic Ideals of Dickens's Heroes

    “Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life, or whether that station will be held by anybody else, these pages must show.”

     

    • David Copperfield, Charles Dickens

     

    We are joined for this episode of Risking Enchantment by Catholic author Eleanor Bourg Nicholson. Eleanor has previously published several Gothic novels including, A Bloody Habit (2018) and Brother Wolf (2021), with her latest novel Wake of Malice set to publish later this year.

     

    In this episode we discuss our deep love of the novels of Charles Dickens. We explore three of his greatest works, David Copperfield, Nicholas Nickleby and Great Expectations, each of which follows a young male protagonist through the many adventures, triumphs and pitfalls of his life. In each case we look at the virtues and the failings of these heroes, the Romantic tropes that Dickens employs to characterize them, and the subversions of these that he uses, particularly in the case of Great Expectations.

     

    Works Mentioned:

     

    Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens

     

    David Copperfield by Charles Dickens

     

    Great Expectations by Charles Dickens

     

    A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

     

    Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens

     

    Dickens: A Critical Study by G.K. Chesterton

     

    David Copperfield: Ignatius Critical Edition (coming soon) by Charles Dickens

     

    “The Age of Cant” by Theodore Dalrymple

     

    What We are Enjoying at the Moment

     

    Eleanor: Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen

     

    Rachel: Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell

    10 March 2024, 8:28 am
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