Kevin J. Madigan
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Kevin J. Madigan is a historian of Christianity who has taught at
Harvard University Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636 as Harvard College and named for its first benefactor, the Puritan clergyman John Harvard, it is the oldest institution of high ...
since 2000. A member of the Faculty of Divinity, he has also served on Harvard's Committee on the Study of Religion, the Medieval Studies Committee, and the Center for Jewish Studies. Since 2009, Madigan has been
Winn Professor of Ecclesiastical History The Winn Professorship of Ecclesiastical History is an endowed chair at Harvard Divinity School. It was established in 1877 by a bequest from Jonathan Bowers Winn (1811-1873), a public-minded and prosperous business man in Woburn, Massachusetts. ...
in Harvard
Divinity Divinity or the divine are things that are either related to, devoted to, or proceeding from a deity.divine< ...
School, an appointment offered by then-Dean of HDS, William Graham, and officially approved by Harvard President
Drew Gilpin Faust Catharine Drew Gilpin Faust (born September 18, 1947) is an American historian and was the 28th president of Harvard University, the first woman to serve in that role. She was Harvard's first president since 1672 without an undergraduate or gradu ...
. He has been married for over thirty years to Stephanie Paulsell, Susan Shallcross Swartz Professor of the Practice of Christian Studies at HDS. They have one child, Amanda P. Madigan, a student at Harvard Law School. In the summer of 2020, Madigan and Paulsell were appointed Faculty Deans of Eliot House, one of twelve undergraduate residences of
Harvard College Harvard College is the undergraduate college of Harvard University, an Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636, Harvard College is the original school of Harvard University, the oldest institution of higher lea ...
.


Education

Ph.D, The University of Chicago Divinity School, 1992, M.A., The University of Chicago Divinity School], 1985, M.A.,
University of Virginia The University of Virginia (UVA) is a public research university in Charlottesville, Virginia. Founded in 1819 by Thomas Jefferson, the university is ranked among the top academic institutions in the United States, with highly selective ad ...
(English Language and Literature), 1984, B.A., magna cum laude, College of the Holy Cross (English Language and Literature), 1982


Areas of specialization and early career

Madigan trained in medieval Christianity at the
University of Chicago The University of Chicago (UChicago, Chicago, U of C, or UChi) is a private university, private research university in Chicago, Illinois. Its main campus is located in Chicago's Hyde Park, Chicago, Hyde Park neighborhood. The University of Chic ...
under Bernard McGinn. While at Chicago, Madigan took courses with Professor Jon D. Levenson, with whom, after Madigan joined the Harvard faculty, he would collaborate in publication and in the editing of the journal ''Harvard Theological Review.'' After taking his doctorate, Madigan also trained at the Summer Institute on the Holocaust and Jewish Civilization, then held annually under the direction of Peter Hayes and sponsored by Chicago's Holocaust Educational Foundation. The following summer, he studied under the then-dean of American Holocaust scholars, the late Raul Hilberg at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington. In 1994, Madigan took his first "ladder" job as Assistant Professor of Church History at
Catholic Theological Union Catholic Theological Union (CTU) is a private Roman Catholic graduate school of theology in Chicago, Illinois. It is one of the largest Catholic graduate schools of theology in the English speaking world and trains men and women for lay and orda ...
(CTU) in Chicago; he would be tenured there in the Spring of 1999. While on the faculty of CTU, Madigan came under the influence of distinguished scholars, such as Robert Schreiter, Zachary Hayes, Donald Senior, John Pawlikowski, and Carolyn Osiek. He would collaborate in publications with several of these colleagues even after leaving Chicago for Cambridge in the Summer of 1999.


Publications

With Professor Senior, he collaborated on the introductory material to Oxford University Press' ''Catholic Study Bible,'' writing an essay on the reception and interpretation of the Bible in the Catholic Church, c. 200–2000 CE, and with Professor Osiek he would, after leaving CTU, soon collaborate on a book on women and ordained office in Early Christianity. While Osiek handled the Greek texts, Madigan translated and commented on all extant Latin texts, including inscriptions, c. 100–66. The same year ''Ordained Women'' appeared, ''Antisemitism: An Encyclopedia of Prejudice and Persecution'', edited by Richard Levy, and of which Madigan was associate editor, was published. Finally, with Pawlikowski, he published his first article on the Holocaust, based on the eleven volumes of the ''Actes and Documents du Saint Siège relatifs à la Seconde Guerre Mondiale'' ed P. Blet et al. A later version of this article, revised for popular consumption, would be published in 2001, entitled "What the Vatican Knew about the Holocaust, and When." The article inaugurated a long and fruitful relationship between Madigan and ''Commentary,'' for which he would publish articles in 2010 on Popes Pius XI and XII, in 2010 on the use made by "Nazis on the Run" of the Vatican's Pontifical Aid Commission", and in 2014 on the Vatican's relationship with the government of Benito Mussolini. This, in fact, was a review-essay of David Kertzer's Pulitzer Prize-winning "double-biography of Mussolini and Pope Pius XI. Madigan would later publish a review defending the distinguished Brown University historian, author of the brilliant and critically acclaimed ''The Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara,'' (about to be made into a movie by Steven Spielberg) in the ''New York Review of Books'' after a book-length critique of Kertzer's study ''The Popes against the Jews: The Vatican's Role in the Rise of Modern Antisemitism'', a volume that had been translated into nine languages, had been published. Madigan's Chicago dissertation, on the influence of Joachim of Fiore and of controversies surrounding the "Spiritual Franciscans" on commentaries on the Gospel of Matthew in the high Middle Ages, especially that written by Peter Olivi (1248–98), was published in revised form in 2003. Madigan talks about his first book in a published interview with an HDS journalist. His first articles were on biblical interpretation, scholastic thought and Christology in the High Middle Ages. Later gathered together and augmented by several other essays, they would form the core of a book, entitled "The Passions of Christ in the High Middle Ages: An Essay on Christological Development (Oxford University Press, 2007) on the intertwined issues of biblical exegesis, scholastic thought, and the issue of dogmatic "continuity" in Christian tradition. In the years 2009–2011, Madigan began to collaborate in several respects with his former teacher, close friend and HDS colleague, Jon D. Levenson, a fruitful collaboration that continues to this day. After publishing his award-winning book ''Resurrection and the Restoration of Israel,'' Levenson, at the request of his editor at Yale University Press, co-authored with Madigan a book on the Jewish roots and Christian appropriation of the idea of resurrection in Second Temple Judaism. In 2010, the two would take over as co-editors of ''Harvard Theological Review,'' as their dear friend and colleague, François Bovon, grew more and more ill before his death in 2013. In 2015, Madigan published ''Medieval Christianity: A New History,'' also published by Yale University Press. It has received generally positive reviews. Francis Oakley wrote in ''Commonweal'' that "Madigan's book can be said to convey a picture of medieval Christianity that is no less lively for being well-informed and carefully balanced. It can be recommended without reservation to any interested reader." Rachel Fulton Brown wrote that it is "a masterful yet accessible introduction to the principal institutional, intellectual, and social developments of medieval Christianity, including the papacy and religious orders, particularly valuable for its attention to the place of Jews, Muslims, heretics, and women in these developments, as well as the problem of educating the laity." Madigan finished the book after serving as Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Faculty for two years at HDS, working with and for his colleague in history, Dean David Hempton. Madigan is now working on a book, based on the rich resources of the Vatican, Jesuit, and Central State Archives in Rome, on the relationship between Protestants and Catholics during the Fascist period in Italy. Entitled The Pope against the Protestants: Evangelical Christians and the Vatican in the Fascist Period in Italy, the book will be published by Yale University Press in 2021.


Film reviews

Madigan has published a number of film reviews, usually on movies that treat themes that he, too, is interested in: the history of antisemitism, the Holocaust, the Second World War, the history of Christian thought, Christian defiance of evil in war, and the joy, motivations, and power of teaching. He has reviewed
Michael Radford Michael James Radford (born 24 February 1946) is an English film director and screenwriter. He began his career as a documentary director and television comedy writer before transitioning into features in the early 1980s. His best-known credits ...
's filmic presentation of ''The Merchant of Venice,'' concentrating on the performance history of the play in Nazi Germany. His ongoing admiration for religiously motivated heroism in times of great risk, as well as his fondness for a well-told story of inspiration that is also based on fact, led him to compose an appreciative review of Marc Rothemund's ''
Sophie Scholl – The Final Days ''Sophie Scholl – The Final Days'' (german: Sophie Scholl – Die letzten Tage) is a 2005 German historical drama film directed by Marc Rothemund and written by Fred Breinersdorfer. It is about the last days in the life of Sophie Scholl, a 21-y ...
''. He paired this review with Sebastian Dehnhardt's heartbreaking ''Stalingrad'', where we see Hitler's fanatical will is not enough to overcome poor planning, low supplies, weather, hubris or a determined Red Army. Here we see the influence on Madigan of his favorite writer on war, the late
Paul Fussell Paul Fussell Jr. (22 March 1924 – 23 May 2012) was an American cultural and literary historian, author and university professor. His writings cover a variety of topics, from scholarly works on eighteenth-century English literature to commenta ...
. The subject of will came up again in a review of the filmic transformation of Philip K. Dick's noirish short story ''The Adjustment Team''. Here Madigan, in contemplating the philo-theological issues of free will and determinism expressed in the film, launches his reflections by quoting the following limerick: There once was an old man who said, "Damn! It is borne in upon me I am An engine that moves In determinate grooves, I'm not even a bus, I'm a tram."—Maurice Hare, "Limerick" (1905) From there, Madigan argues that the film presses neither a hard determinism nor a soft freedom, but a ''via media'' between these two extreme positions.


Teaching

Madigan's pedagogical reflections have centered on the perils, promises and purposes—even the possibilities—of teaching the Holocaust. This was the subject of an article entitled, "Putting a Face on the Six Million," which addresses the issue of when numbers become abstract statistics and even piles of corpses lose their power to move. The talk, later published as an article, was covered by Harvard journalists, one of whom published an essay in the Harvard ''Gazette,'' the official news outlet of Harvard University as an article entitled, "When the Intellectual and Spiritual Intersect: HDS Professor Talks Candidly about How He Was Inspired to teach the Holocaust." The article concludes by quoting Madigan's concluding expression of eschatological hope: "I imagine the victims' physical and emotional wounds healed; the loss of their brothers, sisters, mothers, and fathers restored; their deaths swallowed up forever by the God who keeps his promises, who loves, and who has never forgotten his people. … I imagine the joy and gladness of these innocents with every tear wiped away forever."


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Madigan, Kevin J. Harvard Divinity School faculty Living people American historians of religion Harvard University faculty College of the Holy Cross alumni University of Virginia alumni Year of birth missing (living people)