Kevin F. Burke, S.J., the author of two books on Ignacio Ellacuria, discusses the legacy of the Spanish Jesuit and the other victims of the massacre at the Central American University in El Salvador on Nov. 16, 1989. A total of eight people were killed on that day, which proved to be a turning point […]
Podcasts
America offers a number of podcasts. To learn more about each individual podcast series and subscribe for free, please visit http://americamagazine.org/podcasts
Rediscovering Dorothy Day
Robert Ellsberg, the editor of The Duty of Delight, the Diaries of Dorothy Day remembers first meeting the founder of the Catholic Worker movement, and what he has learned about Day by editing her diaries and her forthcoming collection of letters.
The Trouble with Social Conservatives
William Bole offers a critique of the social conservative movement, arguing that too often their positions are indistinguishable from the platform of the Republican National Committee. This is unfortunate, Bole contends, because a truly independent social conservative movement could play a key role in implementing policies designed to strengthen the family.
Crisis in Honduras
Associate editor Kevin Clarke interviews John Donaghy, a lay missionary from Honduras, on the country’s political crisis in wake of the ouster of Manuel Zelaya on June 28. Donaghy assesses the church’s response to what some have called a coup d’etat, and what impact the political strife will have on the country’s poor.
A Man of Restless Delight
What would “Mexican Night” look like in heaven? The Jesuit Peter Steele offers a playful scenario in his poem of the same name, read here by the author along with “Kyrie Eleison, “Lazarus at the Gate (After Tiepolo),” and other writings. For more on the Australian poet read Jim McDermott’s profile of Steele in the […]
St. Francis’s Mission of Peace
Paul Moses recounts the remarkable meeting between St. Francis of Assisi and Sultan al-Kamil in the midst of the Fifth Crusade. Moses explores why this meeting was glossed over for so many years, and what the encounter can teach in an era of tense Muslim-Christian relations.
Birth and the Prayer Life
Susan Windley-Daoust, a professor of theology at St. Mary’s University of Minnesota, makes the case that birth is not simply an ordeal to endure, but a rich spiritual gift that is comparable in many ways of the prayer life. She argues that while medicine has made great strides in the area of childbirth, it has […]
Mad Men’s Existential Thrills
James Martin, S.J., America‘s culture, editor, looks at the first few seasons of the AMC television show “Mad Men” and the literary and philosophical themes it invokes, from Jean-Paul Sartre and Richard Yates to Flannery O’Connor.
Ethics and Public Policy
Ethicist Thomas Massaro, S.J., considers the legacy of Ted Kennedy and Robert McNamara, and explores the complexities of bringing the church’s social tradition to bear on political decisions.
Ethics and Public Policy
Jesuit ethicist Thomas Massaro considers the legacy of Ted Kennedy and Robert McNamara, and explores the complexities of bringing the church’s social tradition to bear on political decisions.
