How to Break Bad? “The Hunger Games: Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes”

By |2023-12-29T14:54:16-06:00December 29th, 2023|Categories: David Deavel, Film, Senior Contributors|

Perhaps the new "Hunger Games" film's success is due as much to its realism about human nature as it is to the fact that it’s a familiar product whose origins lie in the time before the full conquering of Hollywood by wokeness. The movie critic John Podhoretz once recalled a woman coming out of a [...]

The Art of Darkness

By |2023-12-28T17:20:02-06:00December 28th, 2023|Categories: Evil, Film, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors|

There is a world of difference between the dark arts and the art of darkness. Truth be told, there is more than a world of difference; there is a hell of a difference and a hell of a distance. It is the difference and the distance between heaven and hell. The dark arts are evil [...]

“The Miracle of the Bells”: A Forgotten Novel & Film

By |2023-12-28T16:48:50-06:00December 28th, 2023|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christmas, Film, Timeless Essays|

The Miracle of the Bells doesn’t claim to be great literature, but it is a richly-drawn story about faith and Hollywood, a time capsule of a bygone era that retains its inspirational charm. The Miracle of the Bells by Russell Janney (510 pages, Forgotten Books, 1946) Back in 1947 it was possible for a Catholic novel to [...]

“Good King Wenceslas”

By |2023-12-25T20:01:18-06:00December 25th, 2023|Categories: Audio/Video, Christmas, Music, Timeless Essays|

"Good King Wenceslas" is a Christmas carol that tells a story of a Bohemian king going on a journey and braving harsh winter weather to give alms to a poor peasant on the Feast of Stephen (December 26, the Second Day of Christmas). During the journey, his page is about to give up the struggle [...]

The Incarnation of Truth and Love

By |2023-12-24T23:27:09-06:00December 24th, 2023|Categories: Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christmas, Love, Paul Krause, Reason, Senior Contributors, Theology, Timeless Essays|

The real claim of Christmas, for Christians, is that Truth and Love penetrated the cosmos. Christmas is a warm, loving, and tender season precisely for this reason. That warm fire, or bright sky, or joyful company, is made possible only because that God which ever lives and loves—to which the whole creation moves—entered the creation [...]

The Pure, True Beauty of “O Holy Night”

By |2024-02-13T05:45:56-06:00December 23rd, 2023|Categories: Audio/Video, Christmas, Music|

“O Holy Night” is a carol with a purity, beauty and a timeless message I dearly love. What I’ve always thought of as a humble yet glorious, affecting Christmas carol, turns out to have a vaguely spicy story behind it. Confession: I stopped writing this essay on “O Holy Night,” soured by something I couldn’t [...]

“The Eve of the Eve”: A Christmas Story

By |2024-12-23T11:14:23-06:00December 22nd, 2023|Categories: Christmas, Culture, Fiction, Joseph Mussomeli, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

It was still dark outside when the boy awakened and his thoughts immediately turned to the gifts that would be awaiting him under the tree downstairs. This year, like every other year he could recall, the tree was a little too tall for the ceiling and leaned precariously toward the fireplace opening. In his younger [...]

Wishing You a Wiggly Christmas

By |2023-12-21T17:16:24-06:00December 21st, 2023|Categories: Christmas, Joseph Pearce, Music, Senior Contributors|

Why, one wonders, would readers of The Imaginative Conservative be interested in hearing of my enjoyment of music videos designed for very young children? The answer is that the Wiggles offer children (of all ages) entertainment that is both imaginative and conservative. I have a confession to make. For almost twenty years I’ve been a [...]

Beethoven & the Greatest Concert of All Time

By |2025-02-20T14:20:44-06:00December 21st, 2023|Categories: Audio/Video, Beethoven 250, Ludwig van Beethoven, Music, Timeless Essays|

On December 22, 1808, Ludwig van Beethoven—by then an established composer and a renowned piano virtuoso—conducted a concert of his own works, featuring himself also as pianist, at the Theater an der Wien in Vienna. The program included the premiers of Beethoven's Fifth and Sixth symphonies, his Fourth Piano Concerto, and a concluding piece for [...]

A Thousand Words: Reflections on Art and Christianity

By |2023-12-20T07:39:28-06:00December 19th, 2023|Categories: Art, Beauty, Books, Christianity, Louis Markos|

If orthodox believers in churches and schools do not take upon themselves the responsibility of passing down the deposit of Christian art that has been entrusted to us, the next generation will grow up with little to no knowledge of, or gratitude for, the images by which the Christian worldview captivated the heart, soul, and [...]

Leroy Anderson: Musical Genius in Miniature

By |2023-12-19T09:05:24-06:00December 18th, 2023|Categories: Audio/Video, Christmas, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

What would the Christmas season be without Sleigh Ride, the beloved orchestral chestnut by Leroy Anderson? It’s one of those festive selections endlessly piped into our ears on radio, television, and in every public marketplace, to the point of becoming a sort of seasonal wallpaper—something taken for granted. But if Sleigh Ride is a tune [...]

Love to Learn, Learn to Love

By |2023-12-18T11:41:39-06:00December 17th, 2023|Categories: Beauty, Catholicism, Classical Education, Classical Learning, Classics, Education, Great Books, Liberal Learning, Truth|

To get the most out of your time here, I have some advice: Love to learn, ignore your grades, and learn to love — and then I promise that Thomas Aquinas College will radically change your life. Before I arrived here on campus for the first time 23 years ago, my high school classmates had [...]

Beethoven’s Apollonian Beauty

By |2023-12-16T15:34:06-06:00December 15th, 2023|Categories: Audio/Video, Beethoven 250, Ludwig van Beethoven, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

We think of Beethoven as the stormy rebel, the musical Zeus hurling his thunderbolts. But there exists also Beethoven's Apollonian side. His music can indeed be so elegant, so meltingly tender or nostalgic. So much of what Beethoven composed projects a pastoral peace and contentment, evoking the walks in the country he so enjoyed. Musical [...]

Jane Austen Forever!

By |2023-12-15T18:08:48-06:00December 15th, 2023|Categories: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Books, Classics, Culture, Education, Fiction, Jane Austen, Literature, Television, Timeless Essays|

Pick up a Jane Austen novel, and you will discover that behind the long gowns and country dances, people in her era struggled with the same weaknesses we struggle with today. Well-written stories like Austen’s bring to life the human drama that is played out in every age, in every heart. I’ve been reading Jane [...]

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