Michael Ignatieff is the former leader of the Liberal Party of Canada. Here is a taste of his New York Times piece, “I was born liberal. Defeat taught me our hidden reslience.” Ignatieff writes: “To rebuilt liberalism, we’ll need to […]
Archives for January 2025
The Author’s Corner with Christopher E. Hendricks
Christopher E. Hendricks is Professor of History at Georgia Southern University, Armstrong Campus. This interview is based on his new book, The Colonial Towns of Piedmont North Carolina (University of Tennessee Press, 2024). JF: What led you to write The […]
Diversity and David
Preaching on David reveals the difficulty of handling diversity in the church
Commonplace Book #310
Granted, today, thanks to platforms like Patreon, YouTube, or Substack, there is a possibility to become a sort of “populist” influencer–to retain a voice and a livelihood independent of mainstream gatekeepers and patronage via crowdfunding (particularly for those who have […]
REVIEW: Death of the Author
Can ever-advancing technology be brought under the reign of love?
The Author’s Corner with Tom Smith
Tom Smith is Keasbey Research Fellow in American Studies at Selwyn College, Cambridge. This interview is based on his new book, Word across the Water: American Protestant Missionaries, Pacific Worlds, and the Making of Imperial Histories (Cornell University Press, 2024). […]
60 German universities leave X
In case anyone was wondering, I still do not have my X account back. And I am not losing much sleep over it, probably for the same reasons 60 German universities and research universities are not losing too much sleep […]
It’s okay to say “soccer”
The history of the term should reassure us.
Why Jimmy Carter chose “Imagine”: two views
During his state funeral last week, Trisha Yearwood and Garth Brooks sung the John Lennon song “Imagine.” Why would Carter pick a song that begins: Imagine there’s no heavenIt’s easy if you tryNo hell below usAbove us, only sky Imagine […]
Commonplace Book #309
Consider the myriad cases where policies and initiatives intended to benefit historically marginalized and disadvantaged groups end up primarily serving elites from those groups, while the people from the target populations who actually need help end up benefiting far less, […]
The Last Best Hope of Earth
Perhaps it’s time to reconsider the Promise of America
Sunday night odds and ends
A few things online that caught my attention this week: Jonathan Haidt and others are winning the battle over smartphones in school. Are graduate students in history doing sloppy work? Why did Jimmy Carter choose “Imagine.” The Muslims who fought […]
Commonplace Book #308
…liberal democracy in the late modern world will not find renewal without the moral imagination to envision a public life that transcends the present warring binaries, and with it, a fresh vocabulary with which to talk about and pragmatically address […]
Commonplace Book #307
Though the North’s triumph in the Civil War followed by the passage of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution were great and necessary achievements, the laws could do only so much work. A new solidarity was imposed […]
A Christian view of diversity is rooted in unity
Here is moral philosopher Charles Camosy at Religion News Service: …suddenly, skepticism about all kinds of DEI abounds. Even The New York Times did a long and deeply reportedĀ pieceĀ on how DEI is failing in higher education, particularly at the University […]
Gino Auriemma on NIL and the transfer portal
The University of Connecticut women’s basketball coach is exactly right:
Jim Grossman reflects on his leadership of the American Historical Association
After fifteen years at the helm of the most important historical association in the world, Jim Grossman is stepping aside. Here is Ryan Quinn at Inside Higher Ed: A chapter of history is closing: Jim Grossman is retiring after 15 […]
Jimmy Carter’s Farewell Address: Nuclear disarmament, environmental stewardship, and human rights
January 14, 1981: Read it here.
Blessing of Unicorns: home, neighborhood, AI, and more
This weekās Unicorns consider the love of home, kids doing chores in the neighborhood, the anti-human and anti-God arrogance of AI, and a lore more!
Commonplace Book #306
On all sides, key public intellectuals, activists, politicians, and the various institutions they represent have, for all practical purposes, given up trying to work through their differences. Few, it would seem, have the appetite for it. What, they might plausibly […]