Acting, Dreamwork, and the Study of Religion - A Talk with Amy Brenneman

Acting, Dreamwork, and the Study of Religion - A Talk with Amy Brenneman

Author: Matthew J. Dillon, Center for the Study of World Religions February 23, 2026 Duration: 1:25:27
For episode 20 of Pop Apocalypse, we welcome actress, writer, producer, and activist, Amy Brenneman. After earning her B.A. in Comparative Religions at Harvard, Amy went on to a successful acting career, with star turns in the film Heat, as well as the shows like The Leftovers, The Old Man, and Judging Amy (which she also wrote and produced). In this wide-ranging conversation, Amy and I explore how the craft of acting, study of religion, and practice of Jungian dreamwork have enriched one another throughout her career. We discuss the similarities between ritual and acting, and how a background in comparative religion helped Amy write, build, and inhabit characters. Amy also describes how decades of practicing active imagination and Jungian dreamwork helped her bring a mythic and numinous dimension to roles like Laurie Garvey in The Leftovers. To close, we discuss Amy’s current experience as a Master’s student at Harvard Divinity School and her research into the politics and possibilities of the Trickster.

Hosted by Matthew J. Dillon from the Center for the Study of World Religions, Pop Apocalypse digs into the strange and often hidden spiritual undercurrents flowing through the music, art, and stories that shape our everyday world. This isn't a dry academic lecture; it's a series of conversations that feel more like explorations, where the focus is on the lived, experiential side of creativity. Each episode brings you interviews with musicians, writers, and other artists who discuss how gnostic ideas, esoteric symbols, or direct mystical encounters inform and transform what they make. You'll hear them talk about the process behind the work-where inspiration comes from, how it feels to channel something intangible, and what it means to embed deeper mysteries into popular forms. The aim is to pull back the curtain on those moments of profound meaning we sometimes sense in a song lyric, a film scene, or a novel, but can't quite articulate. With a distinctive sonic backdrop provided by the band Secret Chiefs 3, the atmosphere of the podcast itself becomes part of the journey, blending analysis with a certain resonant mood. Tuning into this podcast offers a chance to reconsider your favorite pieces of culture through a different, more contemplative lens, discovering the sacred threads woven into the fabric of the modern soundscape and story.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 20

Pop Apocalypse
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