The Genealogies of Modernity Journal
Petrarch, Nina Williams, and Mountain Modernity
Petrarch is not modern but classical, for he sees himself as being in continuity with a tradition, as gleaning in the fields after the reapers of the past.
Michael Krom responds to the Genealogies of Modernity podcast
Ekstasis and the Chicken Truck
Knowing a thing truly cannot exhaust the truth of the thing itself, its mystery, the meaning of its being, which consists of and can only be responded to with love.
John-Paul Heil responds to the Genealogies of Modernity podcast
Climbing the Mountains of Modernity
Episode 2.1 of the Genealogies of Modernity podcast is live!
Announcing the Genealogies of Modernity Podcast
What does it mean to be modern? And what is modernity anyway? Find out on the Genealogies of Modernity podcast.
Teaching Happiness
How successful are the liberal arts in teaching students how to be happy?
An interview with Tal Ben-Shahar
MacIntyre and Barfield on Remedies to the Catastrophe
Barfield’s diagnosis of a deeper alienation from language induces a correspondingly more dramatic remedy.
Jeffrey Hipolito puts two great theorists of human history into conversation
Will There Be Computers in Heaven?
What does Silicon Valley have to do with Jerusalem?
An interview with Derek Shuurman
Ghoulish Genealogies
The genealogical description insists on erasing hundreds of years of Christian life. The writer awkwardly alludes to Christianity but cannot imagine that it has any real importance except as a machine for appropriating pagan practices.
Terence Sweeney critiques pop-genealogies of Halloween
A Rejoinder to Irving
As my colleague Pui-Him Ip and I were planning the Theological Genealogies of Modernity conference, which took place in 2021, we wanted to shed light on certain basic issues regarding genealogies of modernity.
Darren Sarisky on his recent work for Modern Theology
A Response to Darren Sarisky on T. F. Torrance
There are few better introductions to this deeply creative theological mind.
Alex Irving’s response to Darren Sarisky’s recent article in Modern Theology
From Subjectivity to Recognition: Genderealogy and Paradigm Shift
The story of rupture is often told by innovative women.
Christine Helmer and Ruth Jackson Ravenscroft on “genderealogy”
“But History and I”: Repairing Genealogy’s Gender Problem
Where are the women in genealogy?
Caroline Wills responds to a recent Modern Theology article by Christine Helmer and Ruth Jackson Ravenscroft
Series Announcement: Theological Genealogies of Modernity
In the coming months, Genealogies of Modernity will be publishing a series of response pieces to articles from Theological Genealogies of Modernity, a special issue of Modern Theology edited by Darren Sarisky, Pui-Him Ip, and Austin Stevenson.
Can AI Reignite Our Faith?
AI gives us information. It furnishes facts. It prompts us with news headlines. But could AI also answer our religious questions?
An interview with Shanen Boettcher
Hedgehog Noontime Discussion with Ryan McDermott
The Hedgehog Review interviews Ryan McDermott
An Interview with Philip Metres: Part II
[Poetry is] the closest thing—alongside music and dance and visual art—to a transhistorical technology of human expression and contemplation.
Anthony Shoplik interviews Philip Metres
An Interview with Philip Metres: Part I
Can't poetry just be beautiful and sufficient in itself, a refuge?
Anthony Shoplik interviews Philip Metres
Is Tradition Compatible with Critique?
How do we adopt tradition without being duped by misinterpretation?
An interview with Anne Carpenter
Carlos Bulosan and the Struggle for Asian American Freedom: Part II
Carlos Bulosan’s humanist vision of freedom was articulated through his deep attention to the material conditions of Filipino life.
Colton Bernasol’s retrieval of a giant of American letters