The Genealogies of Modernity Journal

Interviews & Pathways Genealogies of Modernity Interviews & Pathways Genealogies of Modernity

Pathways

Each month we keep track of the different paths modern life is taking and how writers are keeping up. Here are some routes we found in April that opened new vistas on what it means to be modern and how we became that way.

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Literature & Arts Michael McCarthy Literature & Arts Michael McCarthy

A Vocation to Heal: On Medicine and Morality

Physicians must acknowledge that our wellness comes from embracing our authentic identity, not from a pursuit of individual happiness. The great challenge that lies before us is not so much to heal humanity or to heal ourselves, but rather a renewal of the search for our lost communion.

Michael McCarthy on Walker Percy, medicine, and service of others

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Philosophy & Religion Geoffrey Karabin Philosophy & Religion Geoffrey Karabin

In Transit to the Afterlife

To say, as Gabriel Marcel did, “thou, thou shall not die,” is not a desperate plea nor a psychological coping mechanism, but a way of remaining faithful to the implications of what one has experienced in the beloved.

Geoffrey Karabin on intersubjectivity and immortality

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Interviews & Pathways Genealogies of Modernity Interviews & Pathways Genealogies of Modernity

Pathways

Each month we keep track of the different paths modern life is taking and how writers are keeping up. Here are some routes we found in March that opened new vistas on what it means to be modern and how we became that way.

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Decline & Renewal Terence Sweeney Decline & Renewal Terence Sweeney

The Ecology of a Different Modernity

A new modernity will be marked by a different account of the good life with a different set of shared loves. Kate Soper shows that underneath our tawdry love of stuff there are deeper, more interesting loves.

Terence Sweeney reviews Post-Growth Living and finds in it a counter-modern modernity

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Decline & Renewal Brendan Case Decline & Renewal Brendan Case

Marriage Made the West WEIRD

Joseph Henrich’s account shows that much of what we take to be typically modern habits of mind—individualism, impersonal prosociality, an acute sense of guilt—were already deeply imbedded in the Western psyche by the High Middle Ages.

Brendan Case reviews The WEIRDest People in the World

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Decline & Renewal Maria Cecilia Ulrickson Decline & Renewal Maria Cecilia Ulrickson

A Genealogist of Slavery Confronts the Archives

We can tell stories other than slavery’s violence, but does that extend dignity to enslaved, brutalized humans? Does a story ‘against the grain’ face down the thing the archive does (preserving violence and creating race)? Or does a story about the violence memorialize violence?

Maria Cecilia Ulrichson asks what Christian genealogy can learn in the archives

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Philosophy & Religion Anna Ezekiel Philosophy & Religion Anna Ezekiel

Philosophy in Letters

Varnhagen’s letters are increasingly gaining recognition, not just as records of a brilliant mind and the struggles of a Jewish woman of the time, but as works of literature and philosophy.

Anna Ezekiel explores the possibility of an epistolary philosophy in Rahel Varnhagen

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Interviews & Pathways Genealogies of Modernity Interviews & Pathways Genealogies of Modernity

Pathways

Each month we keep track of the different paths modern life is taking right now and how writers are trying to keep up. Here are some routes we found in February that opened up new vistas on what it means to be modern and how we became that way.

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Literature & Arts Lyle Enright Literature & Arts Lyle Enright

Keeping the Rhythm

Lexi Eikelboom argues, in a new way, that theology always begins from these most ordinary places, driving us deeper into such moments instead of out and away from them.

Lyle Enright explores the impact of taking rhythm seriously

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