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The story begins with a mentor called simply “the teacher.” From a first lecture on sky gods to late-night phone calls and a leather coat the color of memory, we trace how Charles H. Long shaped minds through myth, method, and a rare musicality of thought. We share how he taught us to start with a text, a myth, a story—and then keep going until we hit the pre-logos ground where creation actually happens.
We unpack three core lessons that still unsettle and inspire. First, creation myths are not artifacts; they are tools for making new worlds. Long showed how societies encode creativity in sound and gesture, how ritual returns words to silence so meaning can breathe. Second, this country is racist to the core. Drawing on Vico and Herder, we explore why “origins cue the structure,” how founding potencies persist beneath renovations, and why thinking is a form of action that disrupts the clever priests of national ritual. Third, hope for a new creation myth lies with the colonized—the “colonizer watchers” who know the resources born in the tragic encounter and can turn them toward a future for everyone.
You’ll step with us into the residue of a life: yellow legal pads, nicotine-stained spines, file cabinets, and a shed that feels like an eschatological portal. We talk about improvisation as a scholarly ethic, Long as a bricoleur who arranged books by living adjacency, not rigid taxonomy. We hear tributes from Mexico and remember the laughter, the smoke, and the sly looks that signified more than footnotes ever could. We ask who gets to decide what counts as East and West and why a theology that listens—to screams, moans, chants, and jazz—can break the back of words and set new language free.
If you’re drawn to religious studies, decolonial thought, Black hermeneutics, or theopoetics, this journey offers a rigorous and human portrait of a thinker who kept thought alive. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves big ideas, and leave a review with the lesson that stayed with you most.
Support the show
View the transcript and show notes at podcast.doctrineofdiscovery.org. Learn more about the Doctrine of Discovery on our site DoctrineofDiscovery.org.
By The Doctrine of Discovery Project5
2626 ratings
The story begins with a mentor called simply “the teacher.” From a first lecture on sky gods to late-night phone calls and a leather coat the color of memory, we trace how Charles H. Long shaped minds through myth, method, and a rare musicality of thought. We share how he taught us to start with a text, a myth, a story—and then keep going until we hit the pre-logos ground where creation actually happens.
We unpack three core lessons that still unsettle and inspire. First, creation myths are not artifacts; they are tools for making new worlds. Long showed how societies encode creativity in sound and gesture, how ritual returns words to silence so meaning can breathe. Second, this country is racist to the core. Drawing on Vico and Herder, we explore why “origins cue the structure,” how founding potencies persist beneath renovations, and why thinking is a form of action that disrupts the clever priests of national ritual. Third, hope for a new creation myth lies with the colonized—the “colonizer watchers” who know the resources born in the tragic encounter and can turn them toward a future for everyone.
You’ll step with us into the residue of a life: yellow legal pads, nicotine-stained spines, file cabinets, and a shed that feels like an eschatological portal. We talk about improvisation as a scholarly ethic, Long as a bricoleur who arranged books by living adjacency, not rigid taxonomy. We hear tributes from Mexico and remember the laughter, the smoke, and the sly looks that signified more than footnotes ever could. We ask who gets to decide what counts as East and West and why a theology that listens—to screams, moans, chants, and jazz—can break the back of words and set new language free.
If you’re drawn to religious studies, decolonial thought, Black hermeneutics, or theopoetics, this journey offers a rigorous and human portrait of a thinker who kept thought alive. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves big ideas, and leave a review with the lesson that stayed with you most.
Support the show
View the transcript and show notes at podcast.doctrineofdiscovery.org. Learn more about the Doctrine of Discovery on our site DoctrineofDiscovery.org.

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