Andrew Weeks

Born in 1947, Charles Andrew Weeks grew up in small-town Southern Illinois (Carmi) and studied philosophy, literature, and German at SIU (Carbondale) and the University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign), where he received his PhD in Comparative Literature in 1979. He lived for a number of years abroad as a student in Hamburg (1967-68) and West Berlin (1972-73) and a researcher, Fulbright scholar or invited visiting professor or academic program director in Mainz and Marburg, Germany, and in Graz and Vienna, Austria, where he met his wife Veronika Strotzka. Retired from Illinois State University, he lives with his wife and son in Bloomington, Illinois. He has traveled widely in Europe, Mexico, and Russia, where the inhabitants of lesser known regions interest him more than the famous tourist centers. As a scholar of German literature, his research has focused on editing, translating, and interpreting the writings of the so-called German mystics (Hildegard of Bingen, Meister Eckhart, Paracelsus, Jacob Boehme, Valentin Weigel, and their successors), whom he interprets as voices in defense of the lay people who long for a less specialized, more comprehensive knowledge of the human condition than academic knowledge could provide. Upon completing a draconian cancer treatment in 2017 and anticipating retirement at age 71, he returned to an adolescent love of Russian literature, rereading classical authors and new voices, reviewing his forgotten college Russian, and traveling alone across the Russian Federation from Kaliningrad to Kamchatka, a journey which is the main subject of this memoir. He is currently researching the people and conditions of his native Southern Illinois, traditionally known as "Little Egypt," for a project that bears the working title "Egyptian Darkness." He expects to share the not uncommon fate of dedicated but underemployed humanities scholars by becoming a taxi driver with a PhD, which he believes is not the worst vantage for the further study of humanity.