The Genealogies of Modernity Journal
The Sacred Secular
If we are serious about critiquing colonial modernity, we must reclaim notions of the divine and transcendent.
Ali Harfouch on the Limits of Postcolonial and Decolonial Paradigms
Existential Ponderings: A Review of Infinite Regress
Is life a gift? Or a calamity? Is existence to be affirmed, or avoided? The answer to those questions may very well depend on what you think about the possibility of forgiveness.
Jeffrey Wald reviews Johua Hren’s novel Infinite Regress
Eschatological Resurrection and Historical Liberation
It is the realized and the not yet, an eschatology understood as historiosophy. The condition of dying without the finality of death, bathed always in the light of resurrection hope.
Sarah Livick-Moses reviews Bulgakov 'Sophiology of Death”
Emily Dickinson’s Unexpected Eucharistic Poem
She found herself alone with God, in her garden, religiously unaffiliated and sacrificially loved... She likely never partook in the Eucharist that she wrote about so lovingly.
Luella D’Amico on Emily Dickinson as precursor to the ‘nones’
Severance: of Body and Soul
If you give your soul to the enterprise, for the sake of your desire to live a meaningful life beyond its reach, you might be rewarded with the blessing of forgetting that such a life was ever possible.
Daniel Cunningham on the neoliberal wager
Bewilderment: Getting Modern Parenting Right and Wrong
A cultural product of its time, its value is more anthropological than literary. In an ideological age, what do secular, educated parents most want to believe about their kids?
Maya Sinha on parenting and literature in Powers and O’Connor
Hai Zi: Poet and Genealogist of China
Hai Zi was a poet dedicated to an attempt to create a mythology of modernity; a poet as obsessed with the origins of modernity as he was with the challenge of reforging it.
Jake Grefenstette and poetic genealogies of Chinese modernity
The Tragic and Triumphant in Skyfall and Maverick
Both films concede that technology shapes the future, but the determining factor in the life of heroes and of nations still seems to be not the gun or the plane, but the person behind the trigger.
Lauren Spohn on heroes and technological determinism
Top Gun, James Bond, and the Myth of Obsolete Heroes
Both Maverick and Skyfall encourage us to read the life of the nation in the life of the hero... When we talk about the course of the hero’s life, we’re also talking about history.
Lauren Spohn reflects on similarities between James Bond and Maverick
Pearl Diving in the Archives
After all, isn’t that really what Ressourcement is? A turn to the sources of the past to bring more vitality, and even spiritual vitality, into the present.
Brenna Moore considers a genealogical return to forgotten sources
Genealogies in Motion: Trees of Consanguinity
Genealogies are at their best when they both demonstrate complexity and simplify historical relations by applying principles of significant proximity for specific purposes.
Ryan McDermott maps out historical relationships over time
Forever Young: Hannah Arendt and Natality
If we lose track of natality, newness, and birth, we will ourselves become gray-haired obstructers of the new. Genealogists do not just trace the past. We are students of birth.
Terence Sweeney on genealogy and old age with Arendt and Nietzsche
Typographical Banality and the Univocal Mind
Glorifying the apparently obvious becomes a way of warding off the transcendent, since distraction—made easier by friction-free, disembodied typographic banality—becomes the primary mode of attention.
Duncan Reyburn on mimetically uniform fonts
The Deep Eighteenth Century
It is this backward glance, careful and sustained, at who we used to be, that will give us back the image of who we are now and what possibilities the future might hold.
Kirsten Hall considers the appeal of the 18th century and “2001: A Space Odyssey”
Ecumenical Genealogies and Deep History
The modern conception of how time unfolds leaves us trapped in a chronological sequence with no return to the past; but is it true that “you can’t go back”?
A podcast interview with Matthew Milliner
The Prehistoric Christ
We often think of the time before the birth of Jesus Christ in terms of the Old Testament. But what about the humans in other parts of the world, long before the history of Israel begins?
A podcast interview with Matthew Milliner
(Up)rooted Sin in Katherine Anne Porter’s Noon Wine
Porter narrates how the things we choose to notice reflect the people we become… She encourages readers to pay attention to the warning signs that could lead to our own fates if we fail to keep watch.
Casie Dodd recovers Porter as a Catholic writer