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Arts & CultureBooks
Joseph Peschel
Galileo's struggles with ignorant authorities have eerie parallels in our own age.
Arts & CultureBooks
Joseph McAuley
Chung Min Lee reveals Kim Jong Un for what he is: A dictator who will use any methods available to stay on top.
Arts & CultureBooks
Christiana Zenner
Marcia Bjornerud takes the reader on a tour de force of geology that explains how the contemporary earth sciences help with what religiously inclined readers might call the task of theological anthropology: a consideration of the world beyond humans, the world with humans, and the forces far beyond that shape us all.
Arts & CultureBooks
Brianne Jacobs
While Phyllis Zagano thoughtfully draws out the theological implications of her research, her main point is historical: There is simply no precedent on which to base the exclusion of women from the diaconate in the Catholic Church.
Arts & CultureBooks
Sean Dempsey, S.J.
The new book by the historians Mike Davis and Jon Wiener takes readers on a picaresque voyage around Los Angeles during the “long sixties” (1960-1973).
Miguel de Unamuno has been mostly forgotten in the English-speaking world, but he was one of the most important Spanish intellectuals of the twentieth century (photo: AP).
Arts & CultureBooks
Michial Farmer
The short story “San Manuel Bueno, Martir” by the Spanish existentialist Miguel de Unamuno can help us to sort out the feelings of the unbelieving minister.