2009: After Postmodernism
Monday, January 05, 2009
In a
presidential address at the AHA last Saturday, Gabrielle Spiegel bid farewell to postmodern theory: "We all sense this profound change has run its course." All of us, that is, except for cutting edge Christians. (Don't say you weren't
warned.)
As to where the field is going, Spiegel is not sure. One can always look at other AHA presidential addresses, such as
Kenneth Scott Latourette's, for suggestions.
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Fireplace Stand-Ins
Wednesday, December 31, 2008

On the seventh day of Christmas millinerd gave to me: Two more beer recommendations. Gritty McDuff's
Christmas Ale from Maine, and the intimidatingly good
Gouden Carolus Nöel from Deutschland. Gritty tops
Celebration Ale, providing further evidence for East Coast rivaling West Coast breweries, but both coasts have a long way to go before they rival Germany.
None of this Christmas is over stuff please. Five days to go. Stretch it out.
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Enemies of World Prosperity
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
In the current
New York Review of Books, Princeton economist Paul Krugman explains the pressing necessity for government economic intervention. "Nothing could be worse," he tell us, "than failing to do what's necessary out of fear that acting to save the financial system is somehow 'socialist.'" He refers to relatively successful interventions in the economic crises of Sweden and Japan to prove his case. "I believe," concludes Krugman, "that the only important structural obstacles to world prosperity are the obsolete doctrines that clutter the minds of men."
Just what are these obsolete doctrines? We are not told. Certainly it can't be traditional conservative ideas about a free market, for to be for a free market in no way suggests one opposes all government regulation. This is of course a common cartoon of the conservative position, but something that surely a Nobel Prize winning economist such as Krugman would avoid. Take Yuval Levin writing in the
National Review:
Fiscal conservatives are not opposed to government regulation of the financial markets, provided the goal is to help the market work and not to replace it. Social conservatives are not opposed to public assistance to the poor, provided its aims are to strengthen and grow families and not to replace them.
The overarching principles behind his position are what gives Levin's writing such acuity:
The market is our way of contending with permanent intellectual imperfection, and of channeling individual avarice toward common prosperity in a free society. Alternative ways of pursuing prosperity tend to fail because they fall back on two delusions: that we can know enough to govern the economy in every detail, and that a reallocation of resources can eradicate poverty.
Reasonable conservatives believe that limited government regulation is necessary, like an umpire who calls strikes or breaks up a fight, but doesn't pick up a player and carry him to first base. That said, whoever these ideologues are who are roadblocking world prosperity, I sure hope Krugman finds them. They sound like really bad guys.
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Merry Christmas millinerd readers
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Winter Birds
Originally uploaded by millinerdThank you
all for reading and commenting through yet another year (the fifth). Under the tree you'll find two gifts: First, to make up for a campaign season of MSNBC vs. FOX soundbites, I give you
bloggingheads.tv (in case you haven't yet discovered it). Intelligent liberals and intelligent conservatives (
lots of them) in extended conversation. The posts may be long, but they're podcastable, and we don't have a dishwasher. The second gift is
meaningoflife.tv where one can find a whole lot of people to disagree with.
I'm almost as enthusiastic about bloggingheads as I was about recommending the teaching company, the post that
got this whole thing started. Though back then we looked more like
this (courtesy of the
waybackmachine).
As to the photo, I took it a few steps outside my front door this weekend and thought it was kind of Christmassy. Those who went to Wheaton may catch the reference to a
strange holiday e-card alums received that involved a stiltedly-animated cardinal flying around campus.
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Not Waiting for Benedict
Monday, December 22, 2008
My collegiate pride was stirred to see Wheaton College's own Alan Jacobs charitably dismantle several strands of the pop post-evangelicalism that crowd the Barnes & Noble shelves today ("Do-It-Yourself Tradition,"
First Things, January 2009). I look forward to seeing whether the "very now-minded American Protestants" that Jacobs criticizes will respond with a delight in being deconstructed, or with the
you-don't-get-it defensiveness that has often characterized their reaction to serious critique.
A few samples:
All you need to know about Halter and Smay's book The Tangible Kingdom: Creating Incarnational Community may be this: Their chapter on this history of the Church since the fourth century is called "The 1,700 Year Wedgie"... May God bless their work. But neither good hearts nor good works can make a good book out of very bad one.
In lectures and speeches, [Brian] McLaren often pauses to say that he really does believe that doctrine is important. But he has to say this because he doesn't otherwise show signs of being interested in it. As far as I can tell, McLaren thinks getting doctrine right is easy - comparatively speaking, anyway. But the history of Christianity scarcely bears out that confidence.
Set the bar for monasticism as low as Wilson-Hartgrove sets it and you might as well call a Christian college dormitory a monastic institution... The disciplines and practices of our Christin ancestors are not toys or tools; they are hope of life to those who are perishing.
Rather than snuffing a smoldering wick, however, Jacobs ends with a note of commiseration. He too shares an acute awareness of the inadequacy of current forms of evangelical life. Borrowing terminology from Charles Taylor, Jacobs hopes to lead us towards a more "porous" spirituality; but he admits to being not exactly sure what that involves. Jacobs suggests that "for the wiser," Kierkegaard's worldly knight of faith "will seem too hard." But Jacobs' second option, full monastic retreat, has lost its appeal due to the comforting "buffers" of modern life. Summoning Alisdair MacIntyre, Jacobs suggests we are still waiting for a new St. Benedict, "someone who can articulate a whole way of life and call us to it."
We do indeed need such a figure, someone who can take the solitary, impossible ideals of Kierkegaard's knight of faith and translate them into the realizable discipline of an army, someone who can develop a rule for robust Christian practice that can, in Jacobs' words, "flourish in the
saeculum." But should this be the job description, our new Benedict may have already come and gone. His name was José Maria Escriva. As an evangelical myself (albeit a not very good one), it is unsettling to note a contemporary irony: While Protestants today promote pseudo-monasticism,
Opus Dei - the movement founded by Escriva - continues to be the most forceful contemporary advocate for traditionally Protestant foci: the priesthood of all believers, the sanctity of all vocations, and holiness of the laity in the midst of the world.
Jacobs asks, "What would a serious abbess think that the lifelong disciplines of her people could simply be transferred to the daily experience of a lawyer or a plumber?" The answer is she would be scandalized, as was most of the Catholic world by Escriva until, despite serious resistance, his brand of plumber-piety was approved. It's time Protestants get past the albino and cilice jokes and learn more about what is colloquially referred to as "the work," if only to be reminded of insights we like to think are our own. The
definitive book on the movement by the veteran reporter John L. Allen Jr. (no conservative lackey), has essentially functioned as an exoneration, and it is a pleasure to read as well.
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Art as Religion
Saturday, December 20, 2008
It's a pleasure when a book one has enjoyed, thanks to the much-maligned blog medium, does not end. In his book
God in the Gallery, Daniel Siedell - I have tried
to argue previously - has effectively reframed the Christianity and art conversation. I've found the
last several posts at Siedell's blog a helpful development of his argument. There may be many
paths the religion and art conversation are treading, but I find this one the most interesting, and I intend to follow it.
Art and religion, Siedell suggests, are kin (though he downplays the consequent sibling rivalry). In her recent book,
Seven Days in the Art World, sociologist
Sarah Thornton agrees. She asserts that art today is based on a common
belief that has "transformed contemporary art into a kind of alternative religion for atheists." One could summon a host of other book-length witnesses. There's
Ziolkowski,
Chai, and perhaps most famously
Bell, to name just a few. The point of art-as-religion is not an accusation made by Christians. It is a fact asserted by the secular world. Nietzsche, as is so often the case, puts it best:
The feelings expelled from the sphere of religion by the Enlightenment throw themselves into art.
Strangely, but not unconvincingly, Siedell
posits this as a basis for Christian
engagement of the art world, not its critique. I imagine (read:
hope) this will initially make some people nervous. Siedell wants Christians to understand the art world on its own terms - to immerse themselves in it, even should it be a parallel faith. Would he advise the same strategy to Christians dealing with more established religion such as Voodoo (the analogy is
the art world's, not mine)? Would he advise Christians to have more faith in foreign deities to help them be effective believers in Christ? What about conversion from one religion to another? What about not serving two masters? These are the kind of questions that would be especially raised not just by conservative Christian colleges Siedell engages, but especially by the Russian Orthodox theologians whom he repeatedly invokes.
But to ask these questions, I think, is to misunderstand Siedell. He has already effectively fielded these objections in
God in the Gallery. "The church's aesthetics and poetics," he suggest, "is the ground of all aesthetics and poetics." It seems to me that he has the kind of confidence in Christian faith that sees this other religion called "art" as a stimulant, but not very much of a threat. Therefore, one can participate in its rituals without risking some kind of spiritual promiscuity. This confidence, I think, is what makes his kind of engagement fruitful, and what keeps it from devolving into some kind of pluralistic compromise. Siedell's firm theological conviction, not wobbly doctrine, is what enables him to build a sturdy analogical bridge between the Christianity and the "religion" of art. What's more, this analogy makes practicing Christians naturally disposed toward intelligent participation in the art world - if only they would make the effort.
In his recent posts, Siedell worries that Christians will continue to refuse engagement of contemporary art. My fear, however, is different. I fear they will do so without a confidence similar to Siedell's. When Christianity lacks - as it generally does in this country - a coherent visual tradition, the ability to engage visual art with self-assurance is decreased. Therefore, the Christian art colleges described (decried?) by Siedell have a twofold task: They need
both teach students to engage the contemporary art world on its own terms,
and to restore a coherent Christian visual tradition, one that Siedell acknowledges the need for in his book by pointing to the importance of liturgical art. This is, of course, a lot to ask.
Crisis of FaithWhile I hope it's clear I find Siedell convincing, I'd like to point out a potential pitfall on this path. If we take Siedell's art-as-religion analogy at face value, what happens when the new religion is on the rocks? Oddly enough, the lion's share of irreverence within the religion of art is not coming from present day Savonarolas, but from artists themselves. Martí nez Celaya, a contemporary artist focused upon Siedell's book, may be one of them. In a
review I'm indebted to Siedell for sending along, Celaya explains
I'm not interested in luscious, sexy, virtuosic painting, but the destruction of the image, undermining the certainty of the image.
Elsewhere Celaya describes his aspiration to make paintings that fail.
You may read other things about [my] "October Cycle" but you shouldn't trust them including whatever I've said. The "October Cycle" is a failure, those of you who dislike this work already know that and those of you who like the work should see to quickly understand its futility (62).
That may be just theory speak, but I like to think it betrays something deeper: Celaya's lack of confidence in art as faith. Now of course there are those who wish to import that exact deconstructive tendency into Christianity, but that won't work. It has, after all, always been there, but in a much
more interesting way.
So, what does the adherent of a more tested religion [Christianity] do when adherents of a parallel religion [art] have a crisis of faith? Is it too much for a Christian, working in Siedell's paradigm, to suggest a faith (their own) that affords something - some
one - more worthy of confidence? Surely not. The art world is packed with those who lost their faith in Christianity, which is why Christian images haunt the art world. Conversion, however, is a two way street.
Siedell paints a sorry picture of Christian college art departments today, and perhaps he's right. We could all perhaps stand to give contemporary art more of a chance. But the sorriest picture of all would be this: Those same Christian art departments keeping a rival religion on life support despite continuing signals that, parts of it at least, may just want to die.
UPDATE: Dan Siedell has been kind enough to respond to this post at
his blog.
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Kid Stuff
Thursday, December 18, 2008

Children's literature? I'll admit I found the topic, initially, less than compelling. R.R. Reno recently
interviewed Jody Bottum regarding his article,
Children's Books, Lost and Found, where Bottum suggests that we are now living in a golden age of the genre. Reno offers that this may be because themes of good and evil - less welcome in cutting edge literature - have been pushed into the children or adolescent bracket. Consider, for example, the moral seriousness, the flashing fluorescent line between good and evil drawn straight down the middle of the Harry Potter franchise.
Then consider that the novel one might typically reference to illustrate the metaphysical fog of contemporary fiction - David Foster Wallace's phonebook-sized
Infinite Jest - may be less an
example of such moral abdication in contemporary literature as the
exposure of the same. A novelist like Wallace both proves Reno's helpful point and subverts it. In one of the
more prescient articles I've read in a good while, Mark Hemingway explains:
What Wallace wrought in Infinite Jest and elsewherer wasn't just brilliant writing in the vein of a previous generation of postmodernists (think Gaddis, Pynchon, Barth, DeLillo) so much as a response to them.
Wallace was clever enough to "adeptly mimick nearly every major postmodern writer - solely for the purpose of exposing the limitations of their cleverness..." Because of the sort of serious advice Wallace offered in his famous Kenyon College
commencement speech, Hemingway insists it is "hard not to see his writing as something of a
cri de couer against many of his immediate literary forebears." Hemingway even places Wallace's suicide within this interpretive framework.
If he hated solipsism, that hatred might well have been a result of hating the thing he feared the most - that he would give in to his own demons. Which, in the end, is exactly what he did.
But back to children. Wallace aside, if contemporary letters has ceded to the striplings the epic struggle between good and evil, a similar phenomenon is afoot in film. I've tried to make the case previously that
Horton Hears a Who bears nearly as much theological weight as an Andrei Tarkovsky film. But what
Horton does for the objective theological project,
Bolt does for the theology's subjective aspect. I can't explain myself without giving too much away, but let's just say
Bolt does everything
The Truman Show tried to do, the difference being that
Bolt actually succeeds.
Today, characters in award winning films literally roll in the meaningless mud (award prediction, by the way,
confirmed), but an even grittier nihilism is on offer in something like the
Sex in City film. Ross Douthat, in a very
effective review, encapsulates the series
telos in this way:
All that they [Carrie and Mr. Big] have, post-courtship is that he likes to buy things for her and she likes to accept them. Near the end of the movie, Big e-mails her passages from famous love letters, but he'd be better off quoting Nietzsche: He's about to marry the Last Woman.
Meanwhile, however, we have the animated Nicene Creed (
Horton) and a refutation of the sociological critique of religion through 3-D glasses (
Bolt), so suffer the little children's genre to come unto me.
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Lander@Google
Saturday, December 13, 2008
I
retract. Regarding grad school, perhaps Lander has it on Manolo after all (start at
4:10).
I did two years of a Ph.D. in film and literature and I gave up. What I found when I was there was that it was lot of people who were really intolerant of any other view besides their own, meaning far left wing academic was the only way to think, and anyone who thought differently - not that I'm necessarily a conservative or a conservative at all - but anyone who thought differently was shut up immediately, and it just drove me nuts to see people so close-minded in graduate school and profess to be open-minded because they supported progressive issues - No, that just means you support progressive issues, that doesn't mean your open-minded. So I left.
Whether or not grad school is actually that bad, I consider my
Trojan horse theory confirmed. And speaking of open-mindedness, looks like Google has hosted
Tim Keller as well.
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Writing on the Wall
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Nature's Laws are God's Thoughts
Originally uploaded by millinerdRegarding the relationship between science and faith, our nation's top schools are anything but ambivalent. You just have to know where to look. The inscription above is from Bowdoin College (someone was reading
The Summa), and Princeton's message is even
more explicit.
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the other market
Saturday, December 06, 2008
Ross Douthat has repeatedly made
some important
points about the relative thinness of the American Christianity, left or right. His observations, however, are best understood within the framework sketched out
yesterday by RJN:
In America, where more than 90 percent of the people say they believe in God and well over 80 percent claim to be Christians of one sort or another, Christianity is a bull market. We can debate until the wee hours of the morning whether this is "authentic" or "biblical" or "orthodox" Christianity, but the fact is that this is the form - composed of myriad forms - of the Christian movement in our time and place.
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Friday, December 05, 2008
Manolo appears to understand graduate students (at their worst) even better than
Christian Lander does.
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Thursday, December 04, 2008
Day After T-Day Spectacular
Originally uploaded by millinerdJust so you know, we practice what we
preach (click image for full effect).
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Unironic Brooklyn
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Francis Morrone, author of some of the best American urban guidebooks, likes cities. In
one such book, he describes his move to Brooklyn well before it became
white mandate.
What I was unprepared for was the beauty. I'd always fancied myself a connoisseur of cities, one who could see that a dense and aged urban environment could be as beautiful as natural scenery. Yet the Brooklyn I was slowly getting to know was so diversely beautiful, so clearly the product of successive ideals of the good city (however failed many of these visions ultimately proved to be), that I became a Brooklyn addict.
The addiction lead to Morrone's interest in the legacy of the
City Beautiful movement at the turn of the last century, "that efflorescence of civic art that for me marks the highest stage of American urbanisim." Then he gets a bit angry.
Seldom is the City Beautiful written about without some studied academic distance, which is in itself no bad thing, except that today academics tend to view the American past through the lenses of irony, sarcasm, disdain, or a kind of (generally perfectly irrelevant) quasi-Marxism. I am tired of irony, sarcasm, disdain, and quasi-Marxism. I am tired, above all, of the prevailing sense, particularly among academics, that we view the past from a privileged perspective. We do not know more than the men and women of 1900 knew. I long to know what they knew, however impossible that dream may be.
I haven't read that kind of historiographical spirit and verve since Rachel Fulton's
FJTP (see pages 2-3 and 470). Morrone's rejection of
irony enables his Brooklyn guidebook to transcend whititude. Pay heed, Park Slope.
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Jeudi Gras
Sunday, November 23, 2008

Advent, about which you might consider reading more
here, is a fast season. Should this be true, however, it lends new meaning to the pleasures of Thanksgiving. In the Christian economy, fasts draw their meaning from feasts, and vice versa. Accordingly, here are my pre-Advent picks:
Beer: Sierra Nevada's
Celebration Ale, like everything that brewery puts its minds to, is superb. Tröegs and Victory are two outstanding East Coast breweries that can hold their own next to Sierra Nevada (try the
Pale or
Pils), but the seasonal offerings of both sound
way too
sweet. (A chief micro-brewery mistake seems to be trying too hard.)
Rare Vos is an excellent choice for those corked single bottles, but they're so many of those to try that I'm not ready to repeat just yet. And there's always Chimay (my favorite is the
triple), which contains the added benefit of supporting monasticism. Their cheese is great too.
Wine: Due to all the flavors in a Thanksgiving meal, what wine to serve is a famously difficult quandry, but here goes: For red, I suggest the longtime Milliner house favorite, Philippe Teulier's
Marcillac. For white, go with the Petit Paris
Bergerac Sec. Trust me on these two. Both in the 9-12 dollar range, and for Princetonians, both available at
the Screw!
Food: Everyone has their Thursday sugestions, but what about Friday? I almost look forward to our annual Friday Turkey Pot Pie dinner as much as Thanksgiving itself. Expect nothing less from your leftovers. Instead of a formal pie, just fill a glass caserole dish with a sea of turkey pot pie goodness, and place biscuit "islands" on top. Don't forget to open another bottle of Marcillac.
Après dîner: I don't know port or brandy, but when it comes to whisky, the peat-packed
Caol Ila 18 cannot be beaten (though Highland Park 12 is a bit sweeter and more affordable).
That is all. Enjoy, knowing a four-week fast season is on the way, a fast that requires one to ignore the fact that Tröegs makes a beer for
fasting seasons too.
Your suggestions, granted they're as well researched and refined by years of trial and error as are mine, are heartily encouraged.
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Economic Sense
Thursday, November 20, 2008

I'd call this kind of sense common, but it doesn't seem to be. In
an interview with
Walter Williams, John J. Miller asks an intelligent question: "Why are so many well meaning, intelligent people seduced by socialism?" Williams reciprocates with an equally intelligent answer: "People are attracted to socialism because it
sounds caring - they look to the hoped for results, not the process. "I'm not against charity," says Williams.
Reaching into one's own pockets to help a fellow man in need is praiseworthy and laudable. I think reaching into someone else's pockets to help your fellow man in need is despicable and worthy of condemnation.
For an example of the latter, Burton W. Folsom, Jr. in
New Deal or Raw Deal? explains how FDR's economic policy jailed people for lowering prices, and that at one point Roosevelt proposed a 99.5% tax rate to all incomes over 100,000. Because people in this income bracket generally own, operate and start businesses, this "compassionate" policy would have killed said businesses, inadvertently annihilating countless incomes under $100 - but the WPA wasn't just going to pay for itself.
According to Williams,
article 1, section 8 of the U.S.Constitution lists roughly 21 things that government
can do (providing life meaning and purpose, by the way, is not among them). If Congress limited itself to these mandated functions, our government would spend 600-700 billion dollars a year, not trillions. Nor would it be in the bailout business, because in a free market, businesses failing are just as important their succeeding.
What perturbs me most in economic discussion is the assumption that if one is for a free market (as I am), then one must not care about the poor. It's not a question of whether or not one cares about the poor (a Christian, at least, has no choice on that score.) The question is which system has the potential to lift the most people out of poverty. While wealth redistribution and third-world grants may
sound caring, in reality, we might as well cut out the middle man and build African dictator's French villa's
for them. Who should we listen to on this? Progressive biblical scholars, bishops and theologians, or
Nobel Prize winning economists?
Muhammed Yunus' experience teaching in India led to a crisis in his economic principles. "What good were all my complex theories when people were dying of starvation on the sidewalks and porches across from my lecture hall?" So he went back to the drawing board.
The poor taught me an entirely new economics. I learned about the problems that they face from their own perspective. I tried a great number of things. Some worked. Others did not. One that worked well was to offer people tiny loans for self-employment. These loans provided a starting point for cottage industries and other income-generating activities that used the skills the borrowers already had.
I never imagined that my micro-lending program would be the basis for a nationwide "bank for the poor" serving 2.5 million people or that it would be adapted in more than one hundred countries spanning five continents. I was only trying to relieve my guilt and satisfy my desire to be useful to a few starving human beings. But it did not stop with a few people. Those who borrowed and survived would not let it. And after a while, neither would I.
Let that be your picture of entrepeneurship. Socialism sounds caring, but look beneath the surface: It isn't. The free market sounds uncaring, but look beneath the surface: Mixed with the compassion exhibited by Muhammed Yunis, it can be.
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