Universities and the Pursuit of Doubt

Drew Gilpin Faust’s essay, “The University’s Crisis of Purpose” is worth a read. While, in typical R-1 fashion, she seems to forget that universities are also about educating people, and not just the advancement of research, she rightly “deplores the growing dominance of economic justifications for universities.” There are, she emphasizes, a whole host of…

Canadian Letters: Jameson on Margaret Atwood

I was only three lines into Frederic Jameson’s review of Margaret Atwood’s new novel, The Year of the Flood, when I clicked over and ordered the book. Sounds fantastic: Orwellian, McCarthy-ish dystopia suffused with “religion”–conceived in a way that stretches our categories (as I’ve been trying to do in recent work on methodological assumptions in…

Philosophy: Harrowing Tales from “the Discipline”

Lou Marinoff provides a compelling peek inside the process a philosophy department goes through when doing a hire. (For example, while a position at City College CUNY might be a particularly coveted position, it’s still jarring to read that they received 637 applications for 1 job.) This should be sobering reading for any young scholar…

Decadence, Aestheticism, and Grace: A Theology & Literature Course at Regent College

While summer 2010 seems a long ways off, I’ve already been thinking ahead as I’ve been working on the syllabus for a course I’ll be teaching at Regent College in Vancouver. I jumped at the opportunity because this will provide a chance to indulge my interests at the intersection of theology and literature. The course…

Whose “God in the Quad?”

In the latest New Yorker, James Wood reviews Terry Eagleton’s response to the new atheists (Dawkins, Hitchens, Harris, et. al.), Reason, Faith, and Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate. The essay, “God in the Quad,” exhibits Wood’s familiarity with (and even a kind of backhanded sympathy for) Christian theology (with a bonus, on-the-money side reference…