The Genealogies of Modernity Journal
Racializing Art: A Baleful Genealogy
It is no longer possible to ignore or undersell the impact that racialized and overtly white supremacist ideas have had on art history.
Christopher Nygren reviews Éric Michaud’s Barbarian Invasions
Keeping Tradition Alive
The arduous, the precarious measure of a tradition’s renewal is the measure of our own lives, in our own responses to the one thing necessary. It is we ourselves who look back, and it is we who look forward.
Anne Carpenter on living tradition in Charles Péguy and Maurice Blondel
In Hope of Bulkington: Moby Dick and American Doom
We cannot know the end of America, though we know from the first unfurling of Ishmael’s prophecy that the voyage of the Pequod is doomed.
Daniel Fitzpatrick follows in the wake of the doomed Pequod
Theological Genealogies of Modernity Conference
Nearly every constructive Christian theology either explicitly assesses modern Western culture or embeds implicit judgments about modernity within its claims.
Darren Sarisky on the upcoming Theological Genealogies of Modernity Conference
The Impossibility of Ressourcement
Tradition can be renewed by being re-sourced. What a wonder, and what a wonderful idea. Isn’t it? But let me tell you my problem. As much as I like the idea of ressourcement, it is impossible.
Anne M. Carpenter on Maurice Blondel and Charles Peguy
Breaking Out of the Octopus Trap of Modernity
Our “doing” seems to be free from the static social narrative of the grand “to be” of the past. Instead, it is entrapping us in the ever-smaller understandings of “to be,” as if each of them were the grand narrative.
Takeshi Morisato on being and doing within Japanese modernity
God’s Grandeur in the (Not Entirely) Immanent Frame
Clogged porosity may be more prevalent in modernity. But there are “passageways between the immanent and transcendent realms,” places where grandeur flames through the frame.
Steven Knepper reviews Ryan Duns’s Spiritual Exercises for a Secular Age: Desmond and the Quest for God
Japan and the Octopus Trap of Modernity
What we see in Japanese modernity, according to Maruyama, is a national franchise of these “idols of the market place” through the continuous specialization and internal diversifications that multiply these groups.
Takeshi Morisato on how Japan became trapped in a hyper-specialized version of modernity
What Foucault Meant When He Said “Genealogy”
Problematization is just the beginning. Genealogy is what we do after we problematize. Genealogy can be more constructive than critical.
Ryan McDermott on Foucault and genealogy as comedy
Wendell Berry’s Genealogy of Place
To be connected to a place, to a genealogy, to a community, to a person, requires unconditional love, God’s love; only in this can modernity find what it is truly looking for.
John-Paul Heil reads Hannah Coulter and finds a genealogy of place and, ultimately, love
Su Xuelin’s Catholic Vision of Modern China
Su Xuelin's novel Thorny Heart is a reminder of the freedom with which different Chinese communities decided what could be counted as “modern” or as “traditional.”
Gina Elia examines the relations of modernity, religion, and tradition in early 20th Century China
Traveling the Via Moderna with Pierre d'Ailly
From the vantage point of Pierre d’Ailly’s introduction to the Consolation of Philosophy, history looks like a tower of hand-wringing moderns all the way down.
Matthew Vanderpoel looks to the medievals and finds that we are not the first moderns
Sex Is Not a Metaphor: the Politics of the Modern Self
The self exists to be true to itself, and it can only be so insofar as it sloughs off the heteronomous influences of society. The unhappy result is that “we are all expressive individuals now.”
James Matthew Wilson reviews Carl Trueman’s The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self
Are We Still Medieval? Epochal Overlaps in Contemporary Life
When we are doing genealogies of modernity, we may find that what we are doing is arguing for which epoch we think is best for the future. Thee real question for the present may be this: which past will be our future?
Terence Sweeney on living within different eras
Power Made Perfect in Weakness
Marked by the Spirit with that indelible birthmark, as the Priest wanders, he wanders towards God instead of away. Perhaps Graham Graham too felt this relentless pursuit as an agnostic Catholic, felt the pull of a God who will not let you go.
Shemaiah Gonzalez on a literary saint for modern times
The Problem of Japanese Modernity
Because Japan had grafted what was available in Anglo-European modernity onto its socio-political and cultural milieu (i.e., fūdo 風土), Japan ended up with a strange mixture of ‘super-modernity’ and ‘pre-modernity’ as their peculiar form of ‘modernity.’
Takeshi Morisato on the thought of Maruyama Masao
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