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Commonweal Confronts the Century: Liberal Convictions, Catholic Tradition

Autor The Editors of commonweal magazine Introducere de Peter Steinfels
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 noi 1999
THE BEST OF THE CATHOLIC INTELLECTUAL TRADITION
For 75 years, Commonweal magazine has sought to bring Catholic faith and modern life -- especially the experience of American freedom and diversity -- into fruitful contact. Now Commonweal Confronts the Century not only marks the anniversary of this distinguished journal, it also traces the ways in which the Catholic intellectual tradition has struggled with modernity, democratic institutions, and American culture while remaining faithful to its heritage.
Collected here are many of the most provocative essays the journal has published by a number of the century's most distinguished writers and thinkers. Together they confront controversial issues of continuing relevance within both the Catholic Church and American society in general. In the pages of Commonweal, liberal Catholics have carried on a dialogue about American culture and politics, the arts, religious pluralism, domestic upheaval, war and peace, liberal freedoms, and new moral and sexual sensibilities. Here is a feast of argument, observations, and good writing that will appeal to both the religiously informed and the intellectually curious. Highlights of Commonweal Confronts the Century include:
Dorothy Day on poverty
Graham Greene on his religious conversion
Thomas Merton on nuclear war
Jean Bethke Elshtain on gay marriage
Daniel Callahan on health care
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780684862767
ISBN-10: 068486276X
Pagini: 416
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Ediția:Original
Editura: Touchstone Publishing
Colecția Touchstone
Locul publicării:United Kingdom

Notă biografică

Peter Steinfels, former co-director of the Fordham University Center on Religion and Culture, is a university professor at Fordham. He was religion columnist for The New York Times and editor of Commonweal. Steinfels is the author of A People Adrift: The Crisis of the Roman Catholic Church in America (Simon & Schuster, 2003). He lives in New York City.

Cuprins


Contents

Introduction, by Peter Steinfels

Encountering the Twentieth Century

Setting the Scene

George N. Shuster Terror in Vienna

Michael Harrington The Other America

William Clancy The Catholic in the Modern World: A Liberal View

E. J. Dionne, Jr. The Political Crisis

Religion and Politics

The Editors Is Mr. Smith Dangerous?

John A. Lukacs The Totalitarian Temptation

Eugene J. McCarthy The Christian in Politics

John Cogley Kennedy the Catholic

Michael McAuliffe Richard J. Daley -- A Personal Memoir

The Bottom Line

Edwin V. O'Hara Catholic Industrial Principles

Dorothy Day For the Truly Poor

Budd Schulberg Waterfront Priest

Joseph L. Bernardin Our Responsibility to the Poor

Stuart Dybek Charity

Race and Justice

Ellen Tarry Native Daughter

George H. Dunne The Sin of Segregation

Peter Steinfels The Case of Mr. Y.

Don Wycliff Affirmative on Affirmative Action

Church and State

The Editors Religion in the Campaign

The Editors Do Catholics Have Constitutional Rights?

Eve W. Paul, Theressa Hoover, Richard Neuhaus, Rhonda Copelon, Ira Glasser, Janet Benshoof Correspondence: Abortion and the Constitution

The Editors Abortion, Religion, and Political Life

War and Peace

The Editors Civil War in Spain and the United States

Jacques Maritain Just War

James Finn Citizen Soldier

The Editors Horror and Shame

John Cogley Lonely Protest

Thomas Powers On Nuclear Disbelief

The Editors Is Deterrence Moral?

Thomas Merton Nuclear War and Christian Responsibility

The Editors Getting Out

Daniel Berrigan Notes from the Underground

The Editors Should We Go to War with Nicaragua?

George Weigel A War About America

Life, Death, and the Dignity of Persons

The Editors Justice for Jews

Alfred Werner Christmas at Dachau

Gordon Marino Justifying Torture

Peter Steinfels The Search for an Alternative

Daniel Callahan The Primacy of Caring

Rand Richards Cooper The Dignity of Helplessness

Leon R. Kass Why Doctors Must Not Kill

Robert Johnson This Man Has Expired

Michael Novak Marriage: The Lay Voice

Bernard H ring The Encyclical Crisis

Jo McGowan Marriage Versus Just Living Together

Jean Bethke Elshtain Against Gay Marriage

Sidney Callahan Why I Changed My Mind

Beliefs

Graham Greene On Becoming a Catholic

John Alden Williams On the Holy Mountain

Elizabeth A. Johnson A Theological Case for God-She

John Cogley The Tragedy

John Polkinghorne So Finely Tuned a Universe

Margaret O'Brien Steinfels Dissent and Communion

Reinhold Niebuhr A Protestant Looks at Catholics

George A. Lindbeck The Catholic Crisis

Gordon C. Zahn The Church Under Hitler

The Editors Misremembered

Paul Elie The Everlasting Dilemma

John Garvey When a Child Dies

Art

Willa Cather Escapism

Walter Kerr Catholics and Hollywood

Evelyn Waugh Felix Culpa?

Thomas Molnar Matter-of-Fact Confession of a Non-Penitent

D. Bernard Theall, Thomas Molnar Correspondence: Lolita

Wilfrid Sheed A Guide to Hatchet Jobs

Leonard Mayhew Flannery O'Connor: 1925-64

Rand Richards Cooper Charming Alice

Richard Alleva Spielberg's "Schindler"

Recenzii

Jack Miles author of God: A Biography For a distillation of what the Catholic identity has meant over the last 75 years to American intellectual life, Commonweal Confronts the Century will not soon be topped.
Garry Wills Liberal Catholicism could hardly have existed but for Commonweal, as this eloquent collection demonstrates.