The Genealogies of Modernity Journal
Anti-aphorisms for a Modern Age: A Conversation with Donato Loia
I wanted to capture a certain impression of everyday life, where thoughts arise and disappear, and many ideas blend together in a way that can be confusing and chaotic.
Donato Loia discusses his new book, 1095 Short Sentences
To Sing the Body: Art and the Personalistic Norm
"Yet the human person, standing at the crux of reality, calls the artist to the limit of his creative powers."
Daniel Fitzpatrick on "seeing" as a theological enterprise
Hannah Arendt and The Dream of the 1990s: Part II
[The 1990s] can demonstrate the existence and possibility of the very kind of “miracles” that Arendt encourages us to expect and initiate.
Elizabeth Stice explores glimmers of historical hope
Hannah Arendt and The Dream of the 1990s: Part I
If we want memories of miracles to draw on, we can do worse than to remember the 1990s.
Elizabeth Stice on the human role in history's miracles
Xbox as Time Machine: Exploring Ancient Egypt
Concerns that video game players confuse the game world and the real world, manifesting virtual into real violence, contain echoes of Cervantes’ Don Quixote.
Jacob Martin on video games as time travel
What Is The Machine?
The story of modernity is not so much that we have expelled the gods and that their throne sits empty but rather that it has been filled with a new god.
Grant Martsolf and Brandon Daily conclude their series from The Savage Collective
What Is Human Flourishing?
Flourishing consists of the realization of basic, natural goods constitutive of human personhood emerging from our nature as fully embodied souls.
Grant Martsolf sets the scope of The Savage Collective
The Savage Collective
What is Flourishing? What is good work?
Grant Martsolf and Brandon Daily introduce The Savage Collective
The Gospel according to Convenience
Williams’ work is not just a historical treatise but a call to deep introspection about what it means to live out one’s faith amidst the pressures of any culture that has a different telos than one’s religion.
LuElla D'Amico reviews Nadya Williams’ latest work
Frederic Goudy, Modern Typography, and Critical Traditionalism
“Our times have fallen out of tune with simplicity.”
Michael Golec on typographical modernity
Two New Studies of Owen Barfield
Mateusz Stróżyński on Owen Barfield, whose philosophy and poetry are “indispensable… for those who want to go beyond the present spiritual and cultural crisis.”
Hit Man and Modern Humans
Murder is a real conundrum for modern humans. Officially, we are against it.
Elizabeth Stice on the violence at the heart of modern life
Sacrificing Our Youth
Despite the arrogance of modern thinkers and the mountains of data tech companies collect about us, they still fail to know us deeply.
Charles R. Martelle offer a principal’s view on a modern crisis of attention
Abundance and Loss in Cheever and Porter: Part II
“I was right not to be afraid of any thief but myself, who will end by leaving me nothing.”
Ayman Hareez Muhammad Adib on the modern subject’s self-theft
Abundance and Loss in Cheever and Porter: Part I
On his journey home, Merrill adapts to the conventions of the upper-class in hopes of carving his own place within it.
Ayman Hareez Muhammad Adib on an eight-mile journey through backyard swimming pools
“My Fingers are like Cauliflowers:” the Material Productions of the Hogarth Press
On Virginia Woolf’s thirty-third birthday, she and Leonard Woolf made three significant decisions over tea: they would purchase a house in Richmond, acquire a bulldog named John, and buy a printing press.
Reanna Brooks on The Hogarth Press
The Roots of Eugenics and the Hope of Dignity
Either humanity, and thus each and every human, has dignity in its current state, or it, and by extension we, can never claim to have, or give, dignity.
John P. Slattery offers a genealogy of eugenics