Finding a Home in the Enchanted Forest: Hayao Miyazaki’s Humane Environmentalism

By Timothy Troutner At least from ancient times up to a certain time in the [Japanese] medieval period, there was a boundary beyond which humans should not enter. Within this boundary was our territory, so we ruled it as the humans’ world with our rules, but beyond this road, we couldn’t do anything even if a crime had been committed, since it was no longer … Continue reading Finding a Home in the Enchanted Forest: Hayao Miyazaki’s Humane Environmentalism

Letter from the Editors, March 2016

If our own experience is typical, the sudden waking up of the outdoor world is scattering your thoughts, making you think of elsewhere and elsewhen. Snapping in and out of campus’s collective flashback to Commencement season, you stop in your tracks between classroom buildings and run a glance across the scrubby grass and still-grey trees; your thoughts flick to the past, to the future, back … Continue reading Letter from the Editors, March 2016

Taste & Community: Part One of Two

by Stacey Egger It was Christmas break, and I was out in the wide world—specifically, driving down a Saint Louis street with a close friend. I asked if she wanted to stop by a certain store on the way home. “Oh, shoot,” she replied, “I don’t have my earbuds. I can’t listen to the music they play in there.” The compulsion to drown out the … Continue reading Taste & Community: Part One of Two

Dialogue and Difference: Ecumenical Encounters at Hillsdale

by Timothy Troutner       We’ve all seen them – the freshmen matching wits over “predestination vs. free will” or “Catholicism vs. Protestantism,” testing their newfound powers across Saga tables or late into the night in the student union. Like sparring adolescent mountain goats, their youthful energy and inexperience predominate. In these poorly delineated arenas, many a straw man is born into the world, … Continue reading Dialogue and Difference: Ecumenical Encounters at Hillsdale

Tangibility and the New Place of the Artist

by Mark Naida I “The man gazed at the television. He finished his drink and started another.” – Raymond Carver, “Why Don’t You Dance?”           In Dearborn, Michigan, there is a theme park for historians. Or more properly, a park full of old things – things to stare at, trinkets to buy, and elderly docents all too willing to dispense stories from their vaults … Continue reading Tangibility and the New Place of the Artist

Capitalism & Community: We Need Both

by Birch Smith The history of the West for the last two hundred or so years is intricately tied up with the history of capitalism, and is thus in important ways a history of sharp disagreements. As far back as the Industrial Revolution, voices have been raised in criticism of some aspect or other of the capitalistic system. These criticisms, however, have almost universally tended … Continue reading Capitalism & Community: We Need Both

Korea: Life as the Other

by Devin Creed 안녕하세요! This standard Korean greeting (pronounced “annyeonghaseyo”) literally translates as “I hope you are well/peaceful.” Though unassuming, this simple word reveals much about Korean society. “세”is an honorific marker which is used to show respect to the person being addressed. “요”is the polite ending for verbs. Whenever Koreans encounter an elder or a stranger, the honorific polite form of the greeting is … Continue reading Korea: Life as the Other

War, Mission, & Memory: Dr. Somerville’s Childhood in South Korea

by Micah Meadowcroft Yi Seung-hun was baptized in 1784. Peter Lee, as he became called, returned to Korea from a diplomatic mission to Beijing accompanying his father, the country’s first convert, bearing books and items of devotion. A Silhak Confucian teacher had asked him to learn more about the faith they read of in the writings of Matteo Ricci, a Jesuit missionary to China. The … Continue reading War, Mission, & Memory: Dr. Somerville’s Childhood in South Korea

Music Review: Speakerboxxx | The Love Below

DISC 1 by Forester McClatchey The album begins with a swirl of static, disorienting. Screwed-down vocals say, “This is a test.” A test of sound, yes, but also a test for hip-hop, a test for newcomers (like Killer Mike), and fundamentally a test for ‘Kast: a split album, combining twice the creative energy with twice the risk of failure. After Stankonia dropped in 2000, it … Continue reading Music Review: Speakerboxxx | The Love Below