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consequences.
ABOUT | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review offers critical reflections on contemporary culture: how we shape it, and how it shapes us.Published three times a year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, our journal draws on the best scholarship and thought from the humanities and social sciences to craft an interdisciplinary approach that explores and illuminates the puzzles, vexations, and dilemmas that LOGIN - HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
POLITICS | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERALISM The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE STRANGE PERSISTENCE OF GUILT T hose of us living in the developed countries of the West find ourselves in the tightening grip of a paradox, one whose shape and character have so far largely eluded our understanding. It is the strange persistence of guilt as a psychological force in modern life.If
CELEBRITY CULTURE
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
TECHNOLOGY AND MODERN FRIENDSHIP Prior to the advent of the digital age, these critiques imply, friendship and technology belonged to separate spheres of life. Notice how Turkle disparages “technology” in itself: “Technology gives us the illusions of companionship without the demands of friendship.” 5. 5 x Turkle, Alone Together, 1. The basis of thisbelief is not
THE SELF IN CONSUMER SOCIETY Our postmodern society is a consumer society. When we call it a consumer society, we have in mind something more than the trivial and sedate circumstance that all members of that society are consumers—all human beings, and not just human beings, have been consumers since time immemorial.What we do have in mind is that ours is a “consumer society” in the similarly profound and THE PROBLEM WITH “WESTERN” RELIGIONS ON CAMPUS Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things, America, US Catholic and elsewhere. THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWISSUESBROWSETHR BLOGSABOUTCONTACTLOGIN The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ABOUT | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review offers critical reflections on contemporary culture: how we shape it, and how it shapes us.Published three times a year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, our journal draws on the best scholarship and thought from the humanities and social sciences to craft an interdisciplinary approach that explores and illuminates the puzzles, vexations, and dilemmas that LOGIN - HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
POLITICS | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERALISM The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE STRANGE PERSISTENCE OF GUILT T hose of us living in the developed countries of the West find ourselves in the tightening grip of a paradox, one whose shape and character have so far largely eluded our understanding. It is the strange persistence of guilt as a psychological force in modern life.If
CELEBRITY CULTURE
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
TECHNOLOGY AND MODERN FRIENDSHIP Prior to the advent of the digital age, these critiques imply, friendship and technology belonged to separate spheres of life. Notice how Turkle disparages “technology” in itself: “Technology gives us the illusions of companionship without the demands of friendship.” 5. 5 x Turkle, Alone Together, 1. The basis of thisbelief is not
THE SELF IN CONSUMER SOCIETY Our postmodern society is a consumer society. When we call it a consumer society, we have in mind something more than the trivial and sedate circumstance that all members of that society are consumers—all human beings, and not just human beings, have been consumers since time immemorial.What we do have in mind is that ours is a “consumer society” in the similarly profound and THE PROBLEM WITH “WESTERN” RELIGIONS ON CAMPUS Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things, America, US Catholic and elsewhere. POLITICS | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
WORDSWORTH AND THE PARADOX OF SELF-WRITING 1 day ago · The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
KATHRYN HAMILTON WARREN 1 day ago · The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
TECHNOSOLUTIONISM ISN’T THE FIX Curio · The Hedgehog Review | Technosolutionism Isn’t the Fix. W hen the coronavirus began its long, deadly march through the United States last spring, and states mandated that businesses and schools close and people stay home to limit the spread of the virus, the ability to communicate and work via videoconferencing platforms such as Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and Skype was hailed as a THE SELF IN CONSUMER SOCIETY Our postmodern society is a consumer society. When we call it a consumer society, we have in mind something more than the trivial and sedate circumstance that all members of that society are consumers—all human beings, and not just human beings, have been consumers since time immemorial.What we do have in mind is that ours is a “consumer society” in the similarly profound and SOCIAL PHYSICS COMES TO THE WORKPLACE The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
BEING IN UTOPIA
The term “utopia,” coined by Thomas More in 1516, is a pun on eutopia/out- opia—the good place that is also no place. The lay meaning of “utopia” has come to be a perfect but impossible society, and the term “utopian” to refer to an unrealistic dream or dreamer. In this discourse, one of the most frequent objections toutopia is
THE PROBLEM WITH “WESTERN” RELIGIONS ON CAMPUS Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things, America, US Catholic and elsewhere. INTELLECTUALS AND THEIR DISCONTENTS Russell Jacoby is a professor of history at the University of California, Los Angeles, an author and a critic of academic culture. His book The Last Intellectuals: American Culture in the Age of Academe chronicled the disappearance of the public intellectual inAmerica.
THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWISSUESBROWSETHR BLOGSABOUTCONTACTLOGIN The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ABOUT | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review offers critical reflections on contemporary culture: how we shape it, and how it shapes us.Published three times a year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, our journal draws on the best scholarship and thought from the humanities and social sciences to craft an interdisciplinary approach that explores and illuminates the puzzles, vexations, and dilemmas that LOGIN - HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
POLITICS | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERALISM The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE STRANGE PERSISTENCE OF GUILT T hose of us living in the developed countries of the West find ourselves in the tightening grip of a paradox, one whose shape and character have so far largely eluded our understanding. It is the strange persistence of guilt as a psychological force in modern life.If
CELEBRITY CULTURE
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
TECHNOLOGY AND MODERN FRIENDSHIP Prior to the advent of the digital age, these critiques imply, friendship and technology belonged to separate spheres of life. Notice how Turkle disparages “technology” in itself: “Technology gives us the illusions of companionship without the demands of friendship.” 5. 5 x Turkle, Alone Together, 1. The basis of thisbelief is not
THE SELF IN CONSUMER SOCIETY Our postmodern society is a consumer society. When we call it a consumer society, we have in mind something more than the trivial and sedate circumstance that all members of that society are consumers—all human beings, and not just human beings, have been consumers since time immemorial.What we do have in mind is that ours is a “consumer society” in the similarly profound and THE PROBLEM WITH “WESTERN” RELIGIONS ON CAMPUS Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things, America, US Catholic and elsewhere. THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWISSUESBROWSETHR BLOGSABOUTCONTACTLOGIN The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ABOUT | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review offers critical reflections on contemporary culture: how we shape it, and how it shapes us.Published three times a year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, our journal draws on the best scholarship and thought from the humanities and social sciences to craft an interdisciplinary approach that explores and illuminates the puzzles, vexations, and dilemmas that LOGIN - HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
POLITICS | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERALISM The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE STRANGE PERSISTENCE OF GUILT T hose of us living in the developed countries of the West find ourselves in the tightening grip of a paradox, one whose shape and character have so far largely eluded our understanding. It is the strange persistence of guilt as a psychological force in modern life.If
CELEBRITY CULTURE
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
TECHNOLOGY AND MODERN FRIENDSHIP Prior to the advent of the digital age, these critiques imply, friendship and technology belonged to separate spheres of life. Notice how Turkle disparages “technology” in itself: “Technology gives us the illusions of companionship without the demands of friendship.” 5. 5 x Turkle, Alone Together, 1. The basis of thisbelief is not
THE SELF IN CONSUMER SOCIETY Our postmodern society is a consumer society. When we call it a consumer society, we have in mind something more than the trivial and sedate circumstance that all members of that society are consumers—all human beings, and not just human beings, have been consumers since time immemorial.What we do have in mind is that ours is a “consumer society” in the similarly profound and THE PROBLEM WITH “WESTERN” RELIGIONS ON CAMPUS Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things, America, US Catholic and elsewhere. POLITICS | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
WORDSWORTH AND THE PARADOX OF SELF-WRITING 1 day ago · The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
KATHRYN HAMILTON WARREN 1 day ago · The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
TECHNOSOLUTIONISM ISN’T THE FIX Curio · The Hedgehog Review | Technosolutionism Isn’t the Fix. W hen the coronavirus began its long, deadly march through the United States last spring, and states mandated that businesses and schools close and people stay home to limit the spread of the virus, the ability to communicate and work via videoconferencing platforms such as Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and Skype was hailed as a THE SELF IN CONSUMER SOCIETY Our postmodern society is a consumer society. When we call it a consumer society, we have in mind something more than the trivial and sedate circumstance that all members of that society are consumers—all human beings, and not just human beings, have been consumers since time immemorial.What we do have in mind is that ours is a “consumer society” in the similarly profound and SOCIAL PHYSICS COMES TO THE WORKPLACE The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
BEING IN UTOPIA
The term “utopia,” coined by Thomas More in 1516, is a pun on eutopia/out- opia—the good place that is also no place. The lay meaning of “utopia” has come to be a perfect but impossible society, and the term “utopian” to refer to an unrealistic dream or dreamer. In this discourse, one of the most frequent objections toutopia is
THE PROBLEM WITH “WESTERN” RELIGIONS ON CAMPUS Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things, America, US Catholic and elsewhere. INTELLECTUALS AND THEIR DISCONTENTS Russell Jacoby is a professor of history at the University of California, Los Angeles, an author and a critic of academic culture. His book The Last Intellectuals: American Culture in the Age of Academe chronicled the disappearance of the public intellectual inAmerica.
THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWISSUESBROWSETHR BLOGSABOUTCONTACTLOGIN The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ABOUT | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWELEGANCE OF THE HEDGEHOG DISCUSSIONIS THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW LIBERAL The Hedgehog Review offers critical reflections on contemporary culture: how we shape it, and how it shapes us.Published three times a year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, our journal draws on the best scholarship and thought from the humanities and social sciences to craft an interdisciplinary approach that explores and illuminates the puzzles, vexations, and dilemmas that ISSUES | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
HISTORY | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERALISM The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ANNA KEATING
Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things SOCIAL PHYSICS COMES TO THE WORKPLACE THE STRANGE PERSISTENCE OF GUILT T hose of us living in the developed countries of the West find ourselves in the tightening grip of a paradox, one whose shape and character have so far largely eluded our understanding. It is the strange persistence of guilt as a psychological force in modern life.If
TECHNOLOGY AND MODERN FRIENDSHIP Prior to the advent of the digital age, these critiques imply, friendship and technology belonged to separate spheres of life. Notice how Turkle disparages “technology” in itself: “Technology gives us the illusions of companionship without the demands of friendship.” 5. 5 x Turkle, Alone Together, 1. The basis of thisbelief is not
CULTURAL MARXISM
A specter is haunting the imaginations of many in the modern West—the specter of cultural Marxism. Its influence, the suspicious say (and the suspicious range from the moderately conservative to the screamingly extreme alt-right), is evident in everything from gender-neutral pronouns to training in detecting microaggression to, well, virtually every aspect of what is now called identity THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWISSUESBROWSETHR BLOGSABOUTCONTACTLOGIN The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ABOUT | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWELEGANCE OF THE HEDGEHOG DISCUSSIONIS THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW LIBERAL The Hedgehog Review offers critical reflections on contemporary culture: how we shape it, and how it shapes us.Published three times a year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, our journal draws on the best scholarship and thought from the humanities and social sciences to craft an interdisciplinary approach that explores and illuminates the puzzles, vexations, and dilemmas that ISSUES | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
HISTORY | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERALISM The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ANNA KEATING
Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things SOCIAL PHYSICS COMES TO THE WORKPLACE THE STRANGE PERSISTENCE OF GUILT T hose of us living in the developed countries of the West find ourselves in the tightening grip of a paradox, one whose shape and character have so far largely eluded our understanding. It is the strange persistence of guilt as a psychological force in modern life.If
TECHNOLOGY AND MODERN FRIENDSHIP Prior to the advent of the digital age, these critiques imply, friendship and technology belonged to separate spheres of life. Notice how Turkle disparages “technology” in itself: “Technology gives us the illusions of companionship without the demands of friendship.” 5. 5 x Turkle, Alone Together, 1. The basis of thisbelief is not
CULTURAL MARXISM
A specter is haunting the imaginations of many in the modern West—the specter of cultural Marxism. Its influence, the suspicious say (and the suspicious range from the moderately conservative to the screamingly extreme alt-right), is evident in everything from gender-neutral pronouns to training in detecting microaggression to, well, virtually every aspect of what is now called identityTHE HEDGEHOG REVIEW
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
LOGIN - HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
DISTINCTIONS THAT DEFINE AND DIVIDE 23 hours ago · IASC: The Hedgehog Review - Volume 23, No. 2 (Summer 2021) - Distinctions That Define and Divide LET US NOW PRAISE THE PERIODICAL CICADAS 1 day ago · The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ANNA KEATING
Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First ThingsCELEBRITY CULTURE
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THR BLOG | BLOGS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
PHOEBE MALTZ BOVY
Phoebe Maltz Bovy is the author most recently of The Perils of “Privilege”: Why Injustice Can't Be Solved by Accusing Others of Advantage. Her work has appeared in The New Republic and The Atlantic, among other publications. Articles. THE INTERNET AND YOUTH CULTURE The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWISSUESBROWSETHR BLOGSABOUTCONTACTLOGIN The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ABOUT | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWELEGANCE OF THE HEDGEHOG DISCUSSIONIS THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW LIBERAL The Hedgehog Review offers critical reflections on contemporary culture: how we shape it, and how it shapes us.Published three times a year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, our journal draws on the best scholarship and thought from the humanities and social sciences to craft an interdisciplinary approach that explores and illuminates the puzzles, vexations, and dilemmas that ISSUES | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
HISTORY | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERALISM The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ANNA KEATING
Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things SOCIAL PHYSICS COMES TO THE WORKPLACE THE STRANGE PERSISTENCE OF GUILT T hose of us living in the developed countries of the West find ourselves in the tightening grip of a paradox, one whose shape and character have so far largely eluded our understanding. It is the strange persistence of guilt as a psychological force in modern life.If
TECHNOLOGY AND MODERN FRIENDSHIP Prior to the advent of the digital age, these critiques imply, friendship and technology belonged to separate spheres of life. Notice how Turkle disparages “technology” in itself: “Technology gives us the illusions of companionship without the demands of friendship.” 5. 5 x Turkle, Alone Together, 1. The basis of thisbelief is not
CULTURAL MARXISM
A specter is haunting the imaginations of many in the modern West—the specter of cultural Marxism. Its influence, the suspicious say (and the suspicious range from the moderately conservative to the screamingly extreme alt-right), is evident in everything from gender-neutral pronouns to training in detecting microaggression to, well, virtually every aspect of what is now called identity THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWISSUESBROWSETHR BLOGSABOUTCONTACTLOGIN The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ABOUT | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEWELEGANCE OF THE HEDGEHOG DISCUSSIONIS THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW LIBERAL The Hedgehog Review offers critical reflections on contemporary culture: how we shape it, and how it shapes us.Published three times a year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, our journal draws on the best scholarship and thought from the humanities and social sciences to craft an interdisciplinary approach that explores and illuminates the puzzles, vexations, and dilemmas that ISSUES | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
HISTORY | TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERALISM The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ANNA KEATING
Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First Things SOCIAL PHYSICS COMES TO THE WORKPLACE THE STRANGE PERSISTENCE OF GUILT T hose of us living in the developed countries of the West find ourselves in the tightening grip of a paradox, one whose shape and character have so far largely eluded our understanding. It is the strange persistence of guilt as a psychological force in modern life.If
TECHNOLOGY AND MODERN FRIENDSHIP Prior to the advent of the digital age, these critiques imply, friendship and technology belonged to separate spheres of life. Notice how Turkle disparages “technology” in itself: “Technology gives us the illusions of companionship without the demands of friendship.” 5. 5 x Turkle, Alone Together, 1. The basis of thisbelief is not
CULTURAL MARXISM
A specter is haunting the imaginations of many in the modern West—the specter of cultural Marxism. Its influence, the suspicious say (and the suspicious range from the moderately conservative to the screamingly extreme alt-right), is evident in everything from gender-neutral pronouns to training in detecting microaggression to, well, virtually every aspect of what is now called identityTHE HEDGEHOG REVIEW
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
TOPICS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
LOGIN - HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
DISTINCTIONS THAT DEFINE AND DIVIDE 16 hours ago · IASC: The Hedgehog Review - Volume 23, No. 2 (Summer 2021) - Distinctions That Define and Divide LET US NOW PRAISE THE PERIODICAL CICADAS 17 hours ago · The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
ANNA KEATING
Anna Keating is the co-author of The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life (Penguin Random House). She co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks a handmade furniture studio in Colorado. Her essays can be found in Salon, Notre Dame Magazine, Spirituality and Health, Church Life Journal, First ThingsCELEBRITY CULTURE
The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
THR BLOG | BLOGS | THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
PHOEBE MALTZ BOVY
Phoebe Maltz Bovy is the author most recently of The Perils of “Privilege”: Why Injustice Can't Be Solved by Accusing Others of Advantage. Her work has appeared in The New Republic and The Atlantic, among other publications. Articles. THE INTERNET AND YOUTH CULTURE The Hedgehog Review is published three times per year by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. In keeping with the Institute’s own mission and vision, the journal is concerned with issues of contemporary cultural change and its individual and socialconsequences.
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JE REGRETTE TOUT
JONATHAN MALESIC
Moral growth doesn’t just mean looking to the future but reconciling past and present selfhood. It demands regret.NEW ON THE BLOG
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COVID and the Common Goodby Mark Hoipkemier
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Conditions of Life
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The Machine Pauses
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SEASON OF THE WITCH
BECCA ROTHFELD
Today’s witches are no longer experts in the “occult.” Instead, they rush to aid the downtrodden—and to publish their potion recipes in best-selling how-to guides. DESPERATELY SEEKING MOTHMAN TARA ISABELLA BURTON At their core, cryptids represent the triumph of the particular overthe generic.
RICHARD NIXON, MODULAR MANPHIL CHRISTMAN
What to make of Richard Nixon?Current Issue
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OF CONTINUING INTEREST A SELECTION OF ARTICLES FROM THE ARCHIVES THE SELF-ASSEMBLED CAREERCARRIE M. LANE
The solution to the unraveling of the social contract of employment may not be to prop up the ailing traditional job but, instead, to imagine what other forms work lives might take. PROFILES IN HUMILITYJAMES K.A. SMITH
Our moral educations should happen at dinner tables, in classrooms, on football fields, in synagogues and churches.BODY AND SOUL
MARK EDMUNDSON
Does the body still exist if we do not have souls? LESSONS FROM THE RING—THEN AND NOWGORDON MARINO
Coming to terms with our most basic instincts is another thing we learn through boxing. SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTERSign Up
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