Death Comes for the Deconstructionist Reveals the Un-Deconstructable

Death Comes for the Deconstructionist is a novel for our cultural time and place, but it also transcends it. It will be discussed long after deconstruction has killed itself and the humanities.

“You are She Who is Not”: Szybist’s Incarnadine

Szybist clearly struggles with what the Annunciation means for her. It seems to simultaneously empower and bind contemporary women with the high standards that it sets.

Michel Tournier: Grub First, Theology Later!

Michel Tournier’s The Four Wise Men proposes that four central domains of human life seem dignified enough to merit a spiritual recalibration: love, art, politics … and food.

Postmodernism, Vodka, and Catholic Letters: An Interview with Gregory Wolfe

Artur Rosman interviews Image Journal’s Gregory Wolfe about contemporary religious literature and how literary critics, even religious ones, are failing to recognize and appreciate it.

Catholic Letters: Nihilism and Literary Criticism

Paul Elie’s narrative about Catholic literature misses the mark; great Catholic novels and poetry exist outside of popular critical circles.

A Theopolitical Chess Game in Hong Kong and China: An Interview with Justin Tse, Part III

The Church in Hong Kong is intimately connected with the Church in the People’s Republic of China (PRC). The aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen Beijing Spring saw the Church in Hong Kong become a “bridge church” between the Vatican and the PRC. The question is, a bridge to which church?

The Catholic Umbrella in Hong Kong: An Interview with Justin Tse, Part II

Part II of Artur Rosman’s interview with Justin Tse about the Hong Kong riots, religion, and the Catholic Church.

Hong Kong’s Moment of Zen: An Interview with Justin Tse

Artur Rosman interviews Justin Tse about the Hong Kong protests.