Travis Mullen

Subversive Orthodoxy

Society EN ↓ 19 episodes

Outlaws, Revolutionaries, and Other Christians in Disguise Subversive Orthodoxy is a podcast for people who sense that something vital has been lost in public life, moral imagination, and religious conversation. Many listeners carry fatigue with politics and ideological conflict, yet remain drawn to the depth and realism of the Judeo-Christian tradition. This podcast often resonates with listeners who no longer fit comfortably within dominant religious or political categories, yet remain committed to truth, responsibility, and love of neighbor. The conversations on this show are largely shaped...

Author

Travis Mullen

Category

Society

Podcast website

www.buzzsprout.com

Latest episode

Apr 30, 2026

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Episodes

Episode #19: The Most Radical Thing She Did Was Stay — Dorothy Day (part two) on Presence, Personal Conversion, and Why Holiness Might Be What You Actually Want 30.04.2026

“True worship is to work for justice and care for the poor and oppressed” sounds inspiring until you remember what that work actually feels like at 2 a.m. when you are tired, irritable, and out of patience. We sit with Dorothy Day long enough to let the romance burn off and the real questions show up: what do the poor really need to live with dignity, and what do the comfortable need to unlearn to...

Episode #18: Don't Call Me a Saint — Dorothy Day (part one), the Woman Who Defied Categories 25.04.2026

Dorothy Day is the kind of person everyone tries to claim and nobody can fully control. One side calls her a socialist. Another side calls her a saint. She answered both with the same refusal: don’t use a label to dismiss the demand her life puts on you. We walk through her story from early bohemian politics and labor activism to her Catholic conversion, then the founding of the Catholic Worker Mo...

Episode #17: The Diagnosis You Didn't Know You Needed: Walker Percy on the Malaise, the Moviegoer, and the Art of Being Actually Alive 26.03.2026

WALKER PERCY:  EPISODE SUMMARY You can be comfortable, busy, and entertained and still be in despair. That’s the Kierkegaard line Walker Percy puts at the front of The Moviegoer, and it becomes our doorway into a bigger question: what if the real sickness of modern life is that we don’t even notice what’s missing? We walk through Percy’s story, from a Southern upbringing marked by repeated suicide...

Episode #16: The Saint of Holy Groveling: Jack Kerouac, Catholic Mystic, and the God He Could Never Outrun 20.12.2025

The Saint of Holy Groveling, the Hungover Mystic, and a deep, aching longing for God Jack Kerouac is remembered as the voice of the open road, speed, freedom, and excess, yet beneath the motion lived a deep spiritual loneliness. He carried an intense longing for God that pleasure, travel, and rebellion never resolved. The party always ended in sadness. The road always circled back home. Formed by...

Episode #15: Field Notes #1: What Existentialism Gets Right — and What It Costs You 25.11.2025

We trace existentialism from Kierkegaard’s pivot to the single individual before God to the secular push for meaning without God, then test what still helps in a noisy, anxious culture. We offer a grounded practice of stillness and a challenge to choose rather than drift. • what existentialism means and why it endures • Kierkegaard’s shift from systems to the single individual before God • Nietzsc...

Episode #14: The Silent Kiss That Answers Everything: Dostoevsky, the Grand Inquisitor, and Why Freedom Terrifies Us — Part Three 24.11.2025

We trace Dostoevsky’s polyphonic craft through the Karamazov brothers, probe Ivan’s moral revolt, and unpack the Grand Inquisitor’s claim that people prefer miracle, mystery, and authority to freedom. A silent kiss, not an argument, becomes the counter-move to control. • polyphony as method and why it matters • Dimitri, Ivan, and Alyosha as desire, reason, and heart • Ivan’s scrapbook of atrocitie...

Episode #13: The Man Responsible for Everyone: Dostoevsky on Goodness, the Underground, and the Love That Won't Collapse — Part Two 16.09.2025

In Part Two of our Dostoevsky series we move from diagnosing the underground to exploring the way out. Dostoevsky shows us that the true hero is not the exceptional man but the good man, and goodness is only remarkable in its ability to love while knowing the depths of the underground.  We explore how Father Zosima counsels the brokenhearted with hope that refuses to collapse into platitudes, and...

Episode #12: The Psychology of the Underground: How Dostoevsky Mapped the War Between Mind and Heart — Part One 03.09.2025

Fyodor Dostoevsky revolutionized literature by creating battlegrounds of the mind and heart where faith and darkness constantly struggle for dominance. His concept of "the psychology of the underground" offers profound insights into human nature, revealing how our willfulness often overrides our reason in ways that defy rational explanation. • Born in 1821, Dostoevsky's life was sha...

Episode #11: Avoiding Spiritual Nihilism: How to Deconstruct Every System and Still Keep Your Soul — Nikolai Berdyaev (Part Two) 16.08.2025

Episode #11: Life After Deconstruction, How to Be Free Without Losing Your Soul: Nikolai Berdyaev (part two) Send us Fan Mail Support the show Contact: subversiveorthodoxy@gmail.com Instagram: @subversiveorthodoxy Host: Travis Mullen Instagram: @manartnation Co-Host: Robert L. Inchausti, PhD, is Professor Emeritus of English at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, and is the a...

Episode #10: No System Can Contain the Soul: On Freedom, the Creative Act, and the Person — Nikolai Berdyaev 11.07.2025

Nikolai Berdyaev challenges both Marxism and bourgeois liberalism with his prophetic vision of freedom rooted in Orthodox Christianity, not in political centrism. • Exiled Russian philosopher who viewed freedom as cosmic and primordial—the very ground of human existence • Criticized the "bourgeois spirit" as a degrading clutching after security and small-mindedness • Rejected institution...

Episode #9: Joy as an Act of War: Chesterton on Nihilism, Technology, and the Orthodoxy That Refuses to Stop Laughing — Part Two 29.06.2025

Travis Mullen and Professor Robert Inchausti explore G.K. Chesterton's insights on how Christianity transcends cultural collapse and continually renews itself throughout history. They examine Chesterton's paradoxical understanding of orthodoxy as something exciting and revolutionary rather than stale or safe. • Chesterton identified five historical periods when Christianity supposedly &q...

Episode #8: The Most Joyful Apologist Christianity Ever Produced: Chesterton, Wonder as Rebellion, and the Wit That Outlasts Despair — Part One 29.06.2025

Wonder as rebellion. That's the surprising path Gilbert Keith Chesterton blazed through the intellectual landscape of early 20th century England—and precisely why his voice feels so startlingly relevant to our screen-addicted, anxiety-ridden modern world. Born into the spiritual uncertainty of late Victorian England, Chesterton emerged as perhaps the most joyful apologist Christianity has eve...

Episode #7: The Patron Saint of Deconstruction, The Apostle of Paradox & Radical Faith — Soren Kierkegaard 17.05.2025

This episode dives deep into the restless brilliance of Søren Kierkegaard — the 19th-century philosopher, outsider theologian, and reluctant father of both existentialism and Christian authenticity. If you've ever doubted the plastic gods, burned out on hollow church talk, or longed for a faith that costs something real, Kierkegaard was speaking to you . We explore: The Self as a Task “The se...

Episode #6: Grace Finds the Man Who Never Earned It: Goethe's Faust, Restless Striving, and the God Who Saves Anyway 18.04.2025

What if grace isn’t something you deserve, or even understand—but something that finds you in the middle of your restless, stumbling search for meaning? Did Faust accidentally find grace? That’s one of the most provocative and mysterious questions at the heart of Faust . Here's a way to unpack it: In Faust Part II , despite making a pact with Mephistopheles and engaging in a life of ambition,...

Episode #5: Every Creature Is Cherished: William Blake on Divine Love, Miscarriage, Mercy, and the Infinite Hidden in Small Things — Part Two 28.03.2025

William Blake's visionary poetry represents a revolutionary approach to spirituality, offering a third way between rigid religious dogma and cold scientific materialism through the power of imagination as a divine faculty. • Blake's poem "The Book of Thel" processes the loss of his daughter through miscarriage by imagining conversations with short-lived creatures • Even the sma...

Episode #4: The Prophet Against the Enlightenment: William Blake on Imagination, Newton's Dead God, and the Third Way — Part One 04.03.2025

The latest conversation on Subversive Orthodoxy plunges deep into the heart of creativity and belief through the lens of two iconic figures: William Blake and Johann von Goethe. This episode invites you on a journey as we unravel the intricate relationship between imagination and faith, set against the backdrop of the dominating philosophies of the Enlightenment. In a world increasingly detached f...

Episode #3: The Artist Who Refused to Disappear: Boris Pasternak on Creation, Tyranny, and the Soul That Outlasts the State 12.02.2025

Boris Pasternak’s life exemplifies the struggle between art and tyranny, highlighting how literary expression can serve as an act of resistance against oppression and a journey toward spiritual rediscovery. Through his experiences, Pasternak challenges listeners to reflect on authenticity in a culture dominated by superficial fame and public expectation.  • The essence of creation and self-surrend...

Episode #2: The Witness Who Broke the Soviet Lie: Solzhenitsyn on Truth, Suffering, and the Soul That Tyranny Cannot Touch 23.01.2025

This episode explores Alexander Solzhenitsyn's transformative journey from a loyal communist and soldier to a profound voice against tyranny through his experiences in the Gulag. We discuss the themes of resilience, faith, and truth as vital tools for resisting oppression and the importance of living authentically in today's fragmented world.  • Overview of Solzhenitsyn's early life...

Episode #1: Intro: Outlaws, Mystics, and Revolutionaries — What 20 Forgotten Christians Can Teach a World Losing Its Mind 17.01.2025

What do these 20 outlaws, revolutionaries, and mystics have in common?     What if timeless wisdom from unlikely figures could speak prophetically into our present day?  In this episode, we explore this question with a deep dive into "Subversive Orthodoxy: Outlaws, Revolutionaries, and Other Christians in Disguise" by Robert Larry Inchausti.     Alongside Professor Inchausti, we examine...

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