Comment Interview

Comment magazine has been posting a series of interviews with authors, artists, and activists–in the spirit of the Paris Review and Sports Illustrated. This includes a photo and commentary on the author/artist’s workspace (akin to the Guardian‘s similar tradition on “Writer’s Rooms“). Today Comment has posted a Q&A with me for those who might be…

Ruskin, Work, and ‘The Nature of the Gothic’

One of the courses I’m teaching here in York is a delightful but admittedly idiosyncratic one entitled ‘Victorian Britain and Postmodern Culture: Contemporary Medievalisms.’ (The unofficial title is ‘everything Jamie loves about 19th-century England.’) One of the key figures who keeps confronting us is John Ruskin, whose own Fors Clavigera is the namesake for this…

Rowan Williams is Not a “Liberal”

One often finds the talking heads on the BBC and op-eds in various papers referring to the “sharia row” as another indication of Rowan Williams’ “liberal” tendencies (surely one of the slipperiest and equivocal epithets we have in religious circles). But if one actually attends to his argument–and his corpus–I think one finds that Williams’…

Rowan Williams, Sharia Law, and the End of the Liberal State: Take 2

The furor over Archbiship Rowan William’s lecture at the Royal Courts of Justice has been fanned to the point of hysteria by a reactionary media and government. Some have even called for him to resign. Williams clearly underestimated what sort of beast “public perception” can be. A few follow-up reflections: 1. The Archbishop has offered…