Ranting, Raving & Societally Changing in the 1600s – Meet The Ranters.

There is an image of a Ranter address. The address is on white paper with black ink. Alongside the address is an image of a white ruler. The ruler and address are against a black background.

After the beheading of King Charles I, The Ranters were a disparate group of sexually liberated spiritual anarchists active in Britain. Challenging church and parliamentary authority, The Ranters called compassionate attention to the outcast and subjugated, embraced non-monogamous and queer formations and vouched for an end to tithe payment and private property ownership. Most original texts were burned for their sacrilegious content, nearly wiping The Ranters from history.

The Ranter address, sprinkling prose with conversation, comedy and swearing, parodies the staid measure of the spoken sermon to escape oppressive social restraints and voice disillusionment. The Ranters represented a response to ongoing religious and social problems. As a label – “Ranter” intended to discredit the speaker as a fringe eccentric – the term itself, in its variant forms like “Rantipoler,” “Rantizer”, and “Rantism,” was loosely applied to anyone of extreme opinions. The Ranters, however, transformed this tag of intended ostracising into an emblem of empowerment – a gesture of subversive resistance akin in spirit to the wilful adolescent.

As a label – “Ranter” intended to discredit the speaker as a fringe eccentric – the term itself, in its variant forms like ‘Rantipoler’, ‘Rantizer’, and ‘Rantism’, was loosely applied to anyone of extreme opinions.

Further to reaching those excluded from political discourse by staging speeches in alehouses, occupied churches, and street corners to preach spiritual and sexual freedom, The Ranters addressed all “Fellow Creatures,” embracing the presence and the importance of non-humans as active co-creators of new subject assemblages or alliances. The Ranters’ concerns, confronting the structural and personal, were met with stolid contest. As the teenager is undermined by a discourse of immaturity, a quiet hope that with age will come alignment, The Ranters were dismissed as garrulous and fringe.

The below Rant performs the practice’s hurried intensity, breathlessness, and mental perambulation, offloading burdens in the present tense. “My body is a weed” sinks into the pantheistic diffuse and the spiritual sublime. It speaks to parks as a space to appreciate scruffiness, release the spirit from bondage, and imagine a return to matter.

Image of a green space peppered with various wildflowers and weeds.  There is a recycling centre which is a grey, industrial gathering of buildings.
Image of Polmadie Recycling Center, Scotland. This green space and the regional solace it provided many during the pandemic in part inspired “My Body Is A Weed.” Image by Jude Browning, 2023. 

My Body Is A Weed

My body is a weed,  

My body is a weed, 

weirdly green, 

break-ing Up! 

against 

the gas  

pres-sures of the sun.  

My spirit in the wind, 

My spirit in the wind, 

streaking grit,  

rush-ing full  

of pride.  

Put your face close to me. 

Embrace me like mother. Let us make merry, sing, and dance! Base impudent kisses  

Wanton BASE things 

Look, the sky 

do you think it is lower?  

Well look at it!  

My body is a weed  

spreading in the wind,  

rush-ing low  

to the ground.  

My body is a weed  

I go to seed and bloom.  

Twist-ed  

wet mat-ted tufts

along the bed-rock  

of stones. 

Little cracks coming in 

small white flowers 

onioned in the grass.  

Cans of Strongbow  

Dark Fruit.  

The air  

smac-king 

itself  

fluttering cells.  

My body is a weed.  

A drunk and spoiling  

song,  

pulling roots  

peeling strips  

along the woodland floor.  

Fingering the mud,  

stretching out my neck  

Tongue spongy and wet.  

Tracing the dawn  

inside some  

nerve  

slowly changing pink.  

Discharging frog spawn 

on wet grey rocks.  

Cold bodies  

back-to-belly.  

Baby bottom feeders,  

thistles, burdocks, water striders, maggots, lob worms, bull-rushes,  starlings, tadpoles, red clover.

Bow before those poor 

nasty, lousy, ragged wretches!  

Their little mouths  

caked in soil.  

My body is a pylon  

V-shaped crackling horns  

heady, fast  

high voltage arching bird song. 

Sour piss-coloured clouds  

smearing the sky 

at tumultuous sudden turns.  

Drink a bitter cup,  

my body is a weed,  

there is no peace in these green pastures. 

Go to the cliffs and the rocks,  

listen to the ragged rocks 

rise and shake terribly! 

Give over  

to midnight mischief. 

I’ve been looking Up

for a long time. 

Sliding into mud  

my song being ended  

at the bottom of the pond.

Words By Jude Browning.

______________________________________________________________________________

Jude Browning is an artist living in Glasgow who works across performance, publication, and live-event programming.