America Needs a Kosher Diner
by Cole S. AronsonDiners teach us that our kind of people isn’t the center of the universe. Continue Reading »
Diners teach us that our kind of people isn’t the center of the universe. Continue Reading »
Might ABBA, perhaps innocently, be paving the way for a new, dark, digital world? Continue Reading »
The ongoing Roman celebration of the Casaroli Ostpolitik as a triumph for Vatican diplomacy and a model for the future is sheer mythmaking—and damaging mythmaking at that. Continue Reading »
Critics who bemoan the film’s departures from its source material misapprehend the nature of adaptation, which requires interpreting and resituating a work of art. Continue Reading »
A Catholic understanding of art is about more than cherishing faded glories.
Continue Reading »
We have lost a brilliant man defined by his sage counsel, his moral outrage, and his profound love of the West. Continue Reading »
What we need is the boldness of the early disciples. For theirs was a boldness founded upon divine conspiracy, the true antidote to today’s totalitarian impulse. Continue Reading »
Sex without love—real love, the kind that comes with obligations and unexpected burdens, but also unexpected joys—kills the taste for both. Continue Reading »
People with disabilities shouldn’t need to wait for charity to be included. They already belong, even if that rarely gets them in the door. Continue Reading »
The modern food system is essentially its own religious system, using a network of symbols and phrases to make moral claims and create its own sacred-profane distinction. Continue Reading »