Finding Heroism in Cinema & Television Science Fiction

By |2014-01-04T21:49:07-06:00May 14th, 2013|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Heroism|Tags: , , , , |

Where are the Heroes? Where in this modern and post-modern world do we find an embrace of heroism and the heroic virtues? Certainly not in most literature published since the 1960s.  There exists much irony and tragedy, certainly—remnants, perhaps, of late Greece as well as late Rome.  But, in present-day serious literature, there exists almost [...]

Russell Kirk: An Integrated Man

By |2016-02-12T15:28:24-06:00May 14th, 2013|Categories: Christianity, Community, Conservatism, Culture, G.K. Chesterton, Moral Imagination, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

The most obvious and important thing that must be said about Russell Kirk concerns the harmony that existed between his public and his private life. He was an integrated man who lived what he wrote. There were no disappointing disjunctions between the private and the public self. On the contrary, the happy domestic life at [...]

The Paradoxes of Individualism—False and Real

By |2017-03-09T22:45:48-06:00May 13th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Conservatism|Tags: |

A friend and colleague often forces me to read The Chronicle of Higher Education. It is a dreary compendium of leftist ideology and smug conventional wisdom he enjoys using to depress me. Nonetheless, I do occasionally read beyond the opening paragraphs to see what I would be thinking if only I were as “smart” as I [...]

Philosopher of Love: David L. Schindler

By |2022-02-23T09:02:15-06:00May 13th, 2013|Categories: Christianity, Communio, Culture, David L. Schindler, Essential, Featured, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Theology|Tags: , |

David L. Schindler For the orthodox Christian, is doing one’s public duty more or less reducible to voting for the most socially conservative Republican on the ballot—and then shutting up about whatever misgivings one might have? Surely not. Yet for many election cycles, this has been often implied by the self-appointed guardians of [...]

On the Reading of Books

By |2017-07-31T23:48:29-05:00May 12th, 2013|Categories: Books, Christianity, Fr. James Schall|Tags: |

On Thursday, May 1, 1783, with “the young Mr. (Edmund) Burke” present, Samuel Johnson remarked: “It is strange that there should be so little reading in the world and so much writing. People in general do not willingly read if they can have anything else to amuse them.” The word “reading” here does not mean, say, [...]

Capitalism Has Won! And Conservatives Are Confused

By |2014-01-16T19:07:06-06:00May 11th, 2013|Categories: Capitalism, Peter A. Lawler, Political Economy, Politics|

R.R. Reno,  quite an astute conservative public intellectual, claims that those with eyes to see know that the big news these days is the global victory of capitalism. I’m not following Reno in every respect here, but going with what I would say in support of his position. The good news is that productivity has [...]

Sister Coulsey’s Furnace

By |2014-01-17T12:04:25-06:00May 11th, 2013|Categories: C. R. Wiley, Fiction, Literature, Moral Imagination|

Pastor Ricky had placed all his hopes on the Hawaiian shirt. He wanted to connect with people and he had seen one of those television preachers wearing one. The people at the TV preacher’s church were all tanned and good-looking. Some were even drinking coffee during the service. I need what that guy has, Ricky [...]

Religion & Culture: Christopher Dawson as Superlative Guide

By |2016-08-03T10:37:11-05:00May 10th, 2013|Categories: Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Culture, Featured, Religion, Robert M. Woods|

There is a popular series of books entitled, “Eat This, Not That.” The premise of the series is that of all the foods out there, some are healthier for you than others or some are not as unhealthy as others. We can classify this essay as a “Read This, Not That.” With the growing number [...]

Gatsby and the Grandeur and Poverty of Eros

By |2018-01-31T15:39:11-06:00May 10th, 2013|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Christianity, Daniel McInerny, Film, Literature, Modernity|Tags: |

With Baz Luhrmann’s garish 3D hip-hop adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby rolling into theaters this week, my thoughts turn to a piece from last June’s Guardian in which novelist Jay McInerney (no relation) reflected on why Fitzgerald’s 1925 novel has become an American classic–and more than a classic: “a defining document of [...]

Are Conservatives (or Libertarians) Ruining Liberal Education?

By |2013-12-27T18:22:00-06:00May 9th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Conservatism, Liberal Learning, Libertarianism, Peter A. Lawler|

Plenty of liberals—and not just liberal professors—think there is a conservative conspiracy to use online education and MOOCs, to destroy genuinely higher education in this country. I see no organized conspiracy, and much of the liberal paranoia amounts to whining about the results of legitimate political defeats. Nonetheless, there is something to the thought that hostility [...]

The Soundminded Schizophrenic: Living in the Just-Nowness

By |2023-05-21T11:32:05-05:00May 8th, 2013|Categories: E.B., Eva Brann, Modernity, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|Tags: |

Mr. Ropoulos and I were talking in the St. John’s College Coffee Shop, and the subject of modernity came up. So he asked me to write a few pages for his issue of the Gadfly (ed., the St. John’s student paper). “Modernity” comes from Latin modo, “just-now.” Thus modernity is any generation’s own time; it [...]

Romano Guardini and the Dissolution of Western Culture

By |2023-03-07T08:55:43-06:00May 8th, 2013|Categories: Communio, Culture, Featured, Romano Guardini, Western Civilization|Tags: , |

The End of the Modern World, by Romano Guardini; with an Introduction by Frederick Wilhelmsen. The appearance of this new and expanded edition of Romano Guardini’s book is both timely and helpful. Guardini (1885-1968) writes partially in the spirit of a theologian and partly with the critical eye of the philosopher. And he rightly sees [...]

On Wing to Beauty, Wisdom & Goodness

By |2021-04-13T11:13:17-05:00May 7th, 2013|Categories: Classics, Plato, Quotation, Wisdom|

The wing is the corporeal element which is most akin to the divine, and which by nature tends to soar aloft and carry that which gravitates downwards into the upper region, which is the habitation of the gods. The divine is beauty, wisdom, goodness, and the like; and by these the wing of the soul [...]

Wilhelm Roepke: German Economist as Southern Neighbor

By |2016-12-30T09:41:14-06:00May 7th, 2013|Categories: Economics, Political Economy, Ralph Ancil, Wilhelm Roepke|

Wilhelm Roepke How can a German economist be called a Southerner? Obviously not geographically but in the important sense that Southern Agrarians came to understand, as a possession of the mind and spirit. That Wilhelm Roepke’s mind and spirit, embodying the best of the German tradition, share significantly in the essential features of [...]

Go to Top