Parthenogenesis
Christina Lee Barnes contemplates an unconventional kind of motherhood.
Christina Lee Barnes contemplates an unconventional kind of motherhood.
Taylor Ross finds himself at a loss for words in the house of Bonhoeffer.
Taylor Ross considers how the recent unmasking of Elena Ferrante reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of language and literature.
Adam Joyce reviews Stanley Hauerwas’s new book, The Work of Theology, looking at what it can teach us about the use of the essay as a form of theological reflection.
A review of Colleen Warren’s effort to construct an incarnational theory of language from Annie Dillard’s rich four-decade corpus.
In this essay, David Kline and Dan Rhodes discuss how Christianity can learn from the Tea Party, while at the same time showing how the language of cliché not only distracts us from the real political issues we face but also creates an ersatz sense of certainty that can make us unintentional participants in evil and violence.
Vic Sizemore reviews Robert Clark’s latest novel, Heaven, which tracks the love affair between two men during the heyday of the American dream.
An interview with Cornel West on a range of issues, including politics, religion, power, language, the economy, and race.
This collection of paintings by Laura Lasworth were inspired by the life and works of the writer Flannery O’Connor.