Vanessa Zoltan is a humanist chaplain who describes herself as an "atheist chaplain".[1] She is a graduate of Harvard Divinity School,[2] and holds a BA in English and writing from Washington University in St. Louis, and a MS in nonprofit management from the University of Pennsylvania.[3] She has been called one of "few" feminist humanist chaplains in the world.[4]
Background
editPersonal life
editZoltan, who stated on CNN that all four of her grandparents were Auschwitz survivors,[5] has said she identifies as "an atheist and a Jew and a humanist".[6]
In December of 2022, Zoltan married Peter Mueller, a chemist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[7] [8][5][9]
Early career
editZoltan was a member of Washington University's premier improvisational comedy troupe Mama's Pot Roast from 2002-2004.
She served as Assistant Humanist Chaplain at Harvard University from 2013 to 2016.
Zoltan has delivered talks on interpretation of works such as Jane Eyre and Harry Potter as sacred texts.[2][10]
In March 2019, Zoltan was a recipient of the Gomes Honors from Harvard Divinity School. According to Dean David N. Hempton the 2019 Gomes Honorees "are the spiritual innovators that shape communities of meaning, the vibrancy and diversity of which will be critical to human flourishing in the years to come".[11]
Career
editPodcasts
editIn May 2016, Zoltan and collaborator Casper ter Kuile inaugurated the Harry Potter and the Sacred Text Podcast, a weekly podcast that attempts to read the Harry Potter books as a sacred text. Under the mentorship of Stephanie Paulsell the two explore the characters and context of one chapter per episode through a different central theme, like "vulnerability," "betrayal," or "friendship."[12][13] This show was distributed by the Panoply network, which went out of business in 2018.[14][15] Zoltan and ter Kuile began fundraising to keep the show alive due to the abrupt loss of advertising revenue, and short after the podcast was added to the roster of the Night Vale Presents network in 2019.[16][17] Then Zoltan was able to use the fundraised money to kickstart their own production company: Not Sorry Productions, which is supported partly from advertising and partly through Patreon.
Harry Potter and the Sacred Text charted #2 on the iTunes Podcast Chart in the US on August 18, 2016, after 13 episodes had aired.[18] The podcast has around 9 million downloads per year and repeatedly featured among the top downloads for Religion and Spirituality in iTunes.[19][20][21][22]
Zoltan, with Not Sorry Productions, also created a new podcast, Hot and Bothered, which explores writing romance novels as a sacred practice.[23] In 2021, the production company is set to launch a new show called The Real Question with Zoltan and ter Kuile as co-hosts.[24]
Writing
editZoltan published her first book with Penguin Random House on July 6, 2021: Praying with Jane Eyre: Reflections on Reading as a Sacred Practice.[25][non-primary source needed]
References
editNotes
edit- ^ Zoltan 2015a.
- ^ a b Freedman 2015.
- ^ Harvard 2016.
- ^ Cassel 2015.
- ^ a b CNN 2015.
- ^ Bedsole 2015.
- ^ Wall, Alix (23 December 2022). "A Helmet and a Hug Won Her Over". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
- ^ Chituc 2015.
- ^ Harvard 2015.
- ^ Sunday Assembly 2015.
- ^ "2019 Gomes Honors Emphasize Spiritual Innovation". Harvard Divinity School. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
- ^ "Harry Potter and the Sacred Text - Season Five". Retrieved 6 April 2019.
- ^ "Season One — Sorcerer's Stone". Harry Potter and the Sacred Text. Retrieved 2017-09-12.
- ^ "Podcast shakeup! Panoply, iHeartMedia, Stuff, and…Malcolm Gladwell? are all making industry moves". Nieman Lab. Retrieved 2021-03-01.
- ^ "Breaking: Shake-ups at Panoply and Slate – Hot Pod News". hotpodnews.com. 12 September 2018. Retrieved 2021-03-01.
- ^ @NVPresents twitter status
- ^ "John Green will talk 'Harry Potter' at live podcast event". IndyStar. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
- ^ "'Harry Potter and the Sacred Text' International iTunes Chart Performance". iTunes Charts. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
- ^ Winston, Kimberley. "Reinventing religion — with romance novels". Washington Post. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
- ^ "iTunes Chart - Top 40 US Religion & Spirituality Podcasts". Archived from the original on 2016-09-26. Retrieved 24 August 2016.
- ^ "iTunes Chart - Top 40 US Religion & Spirituality Podcasts". Archived from the original on 2016-11-24. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
- ^ "iTunes Chart - Top 40 US Religion & Spirituality Podcasts". Archived from the original on 2017-06-17. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
- ^ Winston, Kimberley. "Reinventing religion — with romance novels". Washington Post. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
- ^ "Our Projects". Not Sorry. Retrieved 2021-03-01.
- ^ "Praying with Jane Eyre by Vanessa Zoltan". PenguinRandomhouse.com. Retrieved 2021-03-01.
Sources
edit- Freedman, Samuel G. (2015-10-16). "Secular, but Feeling a Call to Divinity School". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-02-17.
- Bedsole, James (October 19, 2015), "Open and Expanding: One year in, the Openly Secular campaign continues to promote acceptance of nonreligious Americans", The Humanist
- Cassel, Emily (April 7, 2015), "Meet the feminist "godless congregation" challenging atheism's bro-culture", Bitch
- Humanist Chaplaincy (Humanist/Agnostic/Atheist): Vanessa Zoltan, Harvard Chaplains (Harvard University), 2015
- Featured speaker Vanessa Zoltan with "Using Reading as a Sacred Practice", Sunday Assembly, June 2015
- Chituc, Vlad (March 25, 2015), "CNN thinks atheists are the devil", The Daily Beast
- CNN Special Report: Atheists, Inside the World of Non- Believers (transcript), CNN, March 24, 2015,
All four of my grandparents are Holocaust survivors and God does not survive Auschwitz, so God does not come in to our home.
- Vanessa Zoltan, Harvard University Freshman Dean's Office, archived from the original on 2016-12-09, retrieved 2015-02-17
- Agrawal, Aditya (February 5, 2015), "Who hosts Anti-Football Parties? The Harvard Independent Profiles the Harvard Humanist Hub.", Harvard Independent
- Zoltan, Vanessa (November 14, 2015), "A Tremendous Amount of Silence in the Face of Violence", Huffington Post