The Man of Steel: Reinventing Jesus?

By |2016-02-14T16:01:05-06:00June 21st, 2013|Categories: Communio, Film, Stratford Caldecott, Superheroes, Superman|

Striking poses in a church is not Superman’s usual schtick, but here he is in his own comic (4 June 2004) startling a priest by turning up for…a sort of confession. He is still wearing the classic costume, which was later redesigned for the “New 52” and the spectacular MAN OF STEEL, recently released. But [...]

Welcome to our new Senior Contributor: Stratford Caldecott

By |2016-11-04T19:18:55-05:00June 15th, 2013|Categories: Stratford Caldecott, W. Winston Elliott III|

Stratford Caldecott The Imaginative Conservative extends a warm welcome to our new Senior Contributor, Stratford Caldecott. Mr. Caldecott is the G.K Chesterton Research Fellow at St. Benet’s Hall, Oxford and the editor and co-director of the Oxford-based journal Second Spring. Mr. Caldecott is the author and editor of several books. His works include: [...]

English Metrical Law

By |2019-10-24T13:35:42-05:00June 7th, 2013|Categories: Communio, Language, Literature, Poetry, Stratford Caldecott|Tags: |

Coventry Patmore Coventry Patmore (1823-1896) was a distinguished English Victorian poet and essayist, well known in his time, who fell into undeserved obscurity during the twentieth century. He published his first small volume of Poems under the influence of Alfred Lord Tennyson in 1844. After receiving a cruel review he tried to destroy the edition, [...]

The Three Kinds of Hope: The Radiance of Being

By |2019-07-13T08:12:38-05:00May 5th, 2013|Categories: Books, Caritas in Veritate, Christianity, Communio, Featured, Pope Benedict XVI, Stratford Caldecott|Tags: , , |

The Radiance of Being: Dimensions of Cosmic Christianity (Angelico Press, 2013) Probably the majority in the environmental movement do not see the relevance of mysticism, or personal virtue and morality, to the great issues of our day. To them it is merely a technological or political challenge. They will try to get their hands on the [...]

Crisis of Fatherhood

By |2022-12-26T10:50:17-06:00April 27th, 2013|Categories: Catholicism, Communio, Marriage, Social Institutions, Social Order, Stratford Caldecott|

The current issue of HUMANUM, the freely available online journal of the Pope John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family in Washington, DC (from the Institute’s Center for Pastoral and Cultural Research) is devoted to the crisis of fatherhood in our culture. It contains articles and book reviews devoted to the literature [...]

A Theology of Gift: The Divine Benefactor and Universal Kinship

By |2023-03-07T08:57:13-06:00April 14th, 2013|Categories: Christianity, Communio, David L. Schindler, Economics, Featured, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Political Economy, Stratford Caldecott, Theology|

My topic is a theological appreciation of the notion of “gift”, and how this throws light on what something is, which to our usual way of thinking would seem to be a matter for philosophy or science rather than theology. The sense of being as “gift” and ourselves as primarily “receivers” of this gift of existence, which carries [...]

Faith and Marriage Under Attack

By |2017-06-05T12:35:06-05:00February 7th, 2013|Categories: Books, Christianity, Communio, Culture, David L. Schindler, Economics, Featured, Marriage, Political Economy, Stratford Caldecott|

On both sides of the Atlantic, we are witnessing a concerted attack on Christianity and on the institution that the Church deems the fundamental cell of society, namely the family founded on the marriage of a man and a woman. In the US, Archbishop Chaput and other bishops have reacted strongly to the “contraception mandate”–the plans of the [...]

What is Reality? The Inadequacies of Scientific Reductionism

By |2016-02-14T16:01:07-06:00December 30th, 2012|Categories: Books, Communio, Stratford Caldecott|Tags: |

I love it when New Scientist tackles the big questions. This week it is “What is Reality?” There is a new humility in science, it seems. Many scientists will now admit that we just don’t know the answer to the question. Scientific Reductionism is no longer convincing. You can examine ever smaller components of the material [...]

The Catholic Tolkien and the Knights of Middle-earth

By |2016-07-17T10:01:24-05:00December 13th, 2012|Categories: Books, Christianity, Communio, Featured, Film, J.R.R. Tolkien, Stratford Caldecott, Virtue|

This month, fans around the world will flock to the cinema to watch the first of three installments of Peter Jackson’s adaptation of The Hobbit—the “prequel” to the award-winning Lord of the Rings trilogy that was also released in three parts between 2001 and 2003 (The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey will be released in U.S. theaters Dec. [...]

Beauty Won’t Save the World Alone

By |2016-07-17T10:01:29-05:00September 30th, 2012|Categories: Beauty, Books, Christianity, Communio, Featured, Gregory Wolfe, Stratford Caldecott|Tags: |

The title of Gregory Wolfe’s excellent collection of essays, Beauty Will Save the World, is based on a much-quoted line from Dostoevsky’s The Idiot. In its context it appears only in indirect speech, being attributed by one of the other characters to the “Idiot” of the title, Prince Myshkin. Thus in its original context its [...]

The Silver Surfer: Rider of the Spaceways

By |2016-02-14T16:01:07-06:00September 16th, 2012|Categories: Communio, Education, Moral Imagination, Stratford Caldecott, Superheroes|

The Silver Surfer was one of Jack Kirby’s inventions for Stan Lee's Marvel Comics, a silver-skinned alien on a flying surfboard endowed with the “Power Cosmic” (the ability to play around with–reshape and transform–matter and energy). This meant he could generate really big explosions if needed, and was basically much more powerful than most other [...]

Themes of Beauty in the Word (III)

By |2016-02-14T16:01:08-06:00September 9th, 2012|Categories: Beauty, Books, Communio, Education, Liberal Learning, Stratford Caldecott|

The Spiral Curriculum. The liberal arts, of course, are not everything. They were not the whole of ancient education either. For Plato a rounded education would begin with “gymnastics”, meaning physical education and training in various kinds of skills, and “music”, meaning all kinds of mental and artistic training. In the Laws (795e) he describes these as physical [...]

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