In The Body in Mystery, Jennifer R. Rust engages the political concept
of the mystical body of the commonwealth, the corpus mysticum of the
medieval church. Rust argues that the communitarian ideal of sacramental
sociality had a far longer afterlife than has been previously assumed.
Reviving a critical discussion of the German historian Ernst
Kantorowicz's 1957 masterwork, The King's Two Bodies: A Study in
Mediaeval Political Theology, Rust brings to bear the latest
scholarship. Her book expands the representation of the corpus
mysticum through a range of literary genres as well as religious
polemics and political discourses. Rust reclaims the concept as an
essential category of social value and historical understanding for the
imaginative life of literature from Reformation England. The Body in
Mystery provides new ways of appreciating the always rich and sometimes
difficult continuities between the secular and sacred in early modern
England, and between the premodern and early modern periods.