The Genealogies of Modernity Journal
Wilfrid Ward and the Modernist Crisis in England
At the heart of the modernist controversies was the question of how human subjects are able to experience the transcendent God.
Elizabeth Huddleston on the perplexity of modernism
Ruled by Different Rhythms
The way to break the vicious cycle of Fascism and Anti-Fascism… is to embrace a more personalistic conception of the state which sees in the individual a meeting place of relationships of every kind.
Matthew Scarince on Christ Stopped at Eboli
Disenchantment and Mass Advertising
Rosenberg reminds us that we can't assume modernity means a sundered sacrality. Rather, our discovery that we can produce the sacred means there is potentially more of it than ever before.
Lyle Enright reviews The Rise of Mass Advertising
Eros, Thanatos, and Bloom
This interplay of death and eros produces a flight of words in Ulysses which signals our fundamental need to give birth to beauty—not simply in the body of another, but in eternity.
Daniel Fitzpatrick on love and death in Joyce’s writing
Critical Theory and Ancient Political Philosophy: Part III
Philosophy does not point toward an abstract transhistorical truth for humanity, but rather to a murky, historically contingent truth… the truth of historical and material conditions.
Joseph Natali on Horkheimer’s Discontinuity with the Ancients
Critical Theory and Ancient Political Philosophy
It is only through the practice of an explicitly critical philosophy that a wholly stagnant self-affirming social order can be avoided.
Joseph Natali on Horkheimer critical theory and the meaning of philosophy
Critical Theory and Ancient Political Philosophy: Part II
For Horkheimer, his method of critical theory, are the truest continuation of the initial philosophic project of the Western tradition.
Joseph Natali on Max Horkheimer and the critical role of Socrates
The Occupation That Never Ended
Del Noce supplies a crucial element lacking in the filmmaker: a transcendental perspective from which to begin the work of restoring life to society and the political community.
Matthew Scarince on The Crisis of Modernity and Francesco Rosi’s Salvatore Giuliano
Fry and Arendt: A Philosophical Debt
It is fitting that Arendt, a thinker who celebrates the possibilities of natality—the joy of new beginnings and of unpredictable ripple effects—made such a long-distance friendship possible.
Sanjana Rajagopal on intellectual debts and friendships
What is the Task of Political Theology?
The political is a lived medium through which we gain insight into the theological concepts that inform the political as one human hierarchy amongst others (economic, social, and so on).
Ali Harfouch on recovering the political through political theology.
Manjot Kaur’s Modern Mythologies
Manjot Kaur’s work creates new stories for a new world and to animate humans to interact with non-humans in ways we have never imagined.
Vaishnavi Patil on artistic genealogies of mythology in South Asia and new tales for the modern world
Bach's Reflections on the Passion
To feel the expression of ‘Mache dich’ is to be compelled to reflect—to think in time, and to listen in time. Bach creates patterns of expectation, weaving them together, and generating further shapes.
Stephane Crayton on "St Matthew’s Passion"
Peter in the Passion: Part III
‘Tongue-in-cheek’ as it may be, but it conveys a Christian soteriology: through Christ’s sacrifice, death does not have the last word; and that mercy and love should extend to all.
Victoria Costa on Sir James MacMillan’s ‘St John Passion’
Peter in the Passion: Part II
Through Peter’s silence hope is granted access to his despairing heart. Through silence ‘La Pasión’ is granted access to the audience, transforming the hearts that listen.
Victoria Costa on Golijov’s musical presentation of Peter’s betrayal.
Peter in the Passion: Part I
Informed by Pärt’s own spirituality, ‘Passio’ participates in a wider musical exploration of Peter as emblematic of a fallenness redeemed and restored in relationship with God.
Victoria Costa on Arvo Pärt and Peter’s denial of Christ
Gaining the Eternal
How it is that the Christian past can be present here and now when it travels to us in the medium of a historical process not only fraught and irregular, but so often saturated with evil and sin?
Jonathan Heaps reviews Nothing Gained is Eternal
Spare Time with Prince Harry
The conversations we have about Spare reveal the social mores that have solidified into shared beliefs about what we believe and have passed down as the proper modes of behaving and thinking.
Luella D’Amico reviews a fallen prince's memoir
Modernizing the Monarchy
Past writers have updated Arthur for new audiences without sacrificing his essential kingship. If that's possible for Arthur, it should be possible for Charles and the British monarchy.
—Gabriel Schenk on what King Charles can learn from King Arthur.
A Poet of Philosophy and Prayer
Reading her poetry, one follows Pinkerton’s journey away from Eros and the self through prayer and philosophy and the contemplation of existence, time, the physical world, and faith.
Mary Grace Mangano’s review of Helen Pinkerton’s poems
The New (Biomedical) Normal
We are witnessing a dehumanization of society driven by a covert, reductionist ideology. We need a return to a non-reductionist anthropology, rooted in classical conceptions of the human good.
Xavier Symons on public health, COVID, and Kheriaty’s ‘The New Abnormal’