How to Cross the Street and Other Lessons I Learned in England

By Grace Marie Wierenga, with some jokes by Brett Wierenga  Ten months ago, my husband and I arrived in Oxford, England, laden with four large suitcases, two carry-on bags, and two backpacks, sporting the chunky winter coats we couldn’t fit anywhere else. Brett is currently studying for his master’s degree in Economic History, an interdisciplinary field all but extinct in the United States, and I’m … Continue reading How to Cross the Street and Other Lessons I Learned in England

“An old thing born of a very distant place”: On the oddness of Christianity

By Evan Gage “Christianity was the last great work of Greek mythology.”I’d heard some odd things hosting an English conversation club with a Turkish university’s Theology Department, but I couldn’t quite make sense of this one. I must have betrayed my confusion, so my student continued.  “It’s just another Zeus story. Zeus is a god, then Zeus is a bull. Zeus, God, comes to earth. … Continue reading “An old thing born of a very distant place”: On the oddness of Christianity

Restoring Liturgical Imagination

By Timothy Troutner By the time I returned from Turkey this summer, I’d become convinced that American Christians have a lot to learn from the builders of the underground cities and towering domes that I and the rest of my class in the Honors Program had wandered through on our three-week trip. The iconography and Marian devotion displayed in ancient near eastern Christianity presented a … Continue reading Restoring Liturgical Imagination

Puzzle-solving, Adventure, Discovery: A conversation with Claire Schumock

By Madeline Johnson As I emerged one late-summer morning from a dream about Barack Obama giving a poorly attended talk at Hillsdale, I found my mind (despite the inexplicable dream) perceptibly clearer for having spent the weekend at my parents’ house on the Mississippi. For hours on end a broad, deep sky had flooded my small frame with gold light and heat. The surrounding flora’s … Continue reading Puzzle-solving, Adventure, Discovery: A conversation with Claire Schumock

Film Review: Calvary

By Timothy Troutner The 2014 film Calvary begins with a quotation (alas, of disputed authenticity) from St. Augustine. The text reads: “Do not despair; one of the thieves was saved. Do not presume; one of the thieves was damned.” With this first image, writer and director John Michael McDonagh evokes the presence of death and the fragility of faith that will dominate the rest of … Continue reading Film Review: Calvary

Book Review: Siddhartha 

By Sarah Schweizer It took three summers of living in the town small town of Montagnola, Switzerland, pointing German tourists toward his house at the end of every morning run, and one moment of sheer desperation for me to finally read a book by the German Modernist writer Hermann Hesse. Hesse, I discovered, had influenced the American beat poets in the mid-1900s and somehow avoided … Continue reading Book Review: Siddhartha 

Satire: Freshman Disorientation

By Noah Weinrich Among the reunited friends and classmates returning to Hillsdale College this fall wanders a strange new social group: a swarm of wide-eyed, eager students commonly referred to as “freshmen.” They explore the campus, taking pictures in front of Ronald Reagan and Central Hall. An investigation into these newcomers has yielded several key statistics: 64% have expressed an intention to major in politics, … Continue reading Satire: Freshman Disorientation

Fifty Shades of Grey: Not Everything I Thought It Would Be

Fifty Shades of Grey’s reputation precedes it, and passionate critics and defenders rush to add their voices to the chatter whenever the topic surfaces. We defame the books as pornographic and dismiss them as horrendous literature that wreaks havoc on the intellectual welfare of the general population. I too originally dismissed the series as a plotless joke, and it was not until I actually read … Continue reading Fifty Shades of Grey: Not Everything I Thought It Would Be

The Pilgrim Found: A Review of Gregory Wolfe’s Biography, Malcolm Muggeridge

“The Catholic faith is, I believe, a right faith in essentials but it must grow up inside one. Evolve through suffering to have values.”  -Malcolm Muggeridge to Alec Vidler (43) Malcolm Muggeridge: A Biography by Gregory Wolfe (1995) ISI Books: Irvington, Delaware. When one asks the average modern person their thoughts on Malcolm Muggeridge, their response will likely be mild bewilderment. For all intents and purposes, … Continue reading The Pilgrim Found: A Review of Gregory Wolfe’s Biography, Malcolm Muggeridge

Letter From the Editor, April 2015

Letter from the Editor In 2003, Hans Zeiger founded a small newspaper at Hillsdale College “To facilitate a forum for Conservative issues in order to stimulate thinking on various aspects of political life.” That newspaper, the Hillsdale Conservative, hoped to combat liberalism across America, and worked with the Hillsdale College Republicans to pursue that goal. When that relationship proved rocky, Zeiger ceded the role of … Continue reading Letter From the Editor, April 2015