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"Large and Startling Figures: Flannery O'Connor's Postmodern Apologetic"

The Catholic Information Center 

1501 K St NW, Washington, DC 20005

6:00 pm

A lecture by Prof. Frederick Bauerschmidt (Loyola University Maryland)

Reception to follow

The first in a three-part series on Christian literature, co-sponsored by the CIC and the Thomistic Institute, entitled "Finding God in the Modern World."

This event is free and open to the public.

Synopsis:

"Writing to a friend in the mid-1950s, the American fiction writer Flannery O'Connor noted that we live in an age in which "the moral sense has been bred out of certain sections of the population, like the wings have been bred off certain chickens to produce more white meat on them....This is a Generation of wingless chickens, which I suppose is what Nietzsche meant when he said God was dead." In such a situation, she felt, subtlety could not work: "you have to make your vision apparent by shock---to the hard of hearing you shout, and for the almost blind you draw large and startling figures." Dr. Bauerschmidt will explore how, through her fiction, O'Conner presented her Catholic vision by means of grotesque and often shockingly violent tales in which the absolute demands of belief clash with postmodern indifference, attempting to open jaded modern readers to the possibility of transcendent truth."

Speaker:

Dr. Frederick C. Bauerschmidt is Professor of Theology at Loyola University Maryland and a deacon of the Archdiocese of Baltimore. He has published book on the theology of Thomas Aquinas and the Christian mystical tradition, as well as numerous articles on Catholic life and thought.

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The Soul, the Mind, and Modern Science: Why the Traditional Understanding of the Soul is Plausible Today

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The Rational Mystery: The Promise of Catholicism in the 21st Century