Your web browser is out of date. Update your browser for more security, speed and the best experience on this site.

Update your browser

Artefact

A Spotlight on Culture

Through reviews and longer articles, ArteFact keeps a finger on the pulse of how our culture is reflecting on itself.

review Poetry

Stories in Verse

Carla Galdo

Virginia Woolf once wrote a letter to a young poet friend, advising him to avoid the all-too-frequent trap of writing exclusively about “one single person”—himself. “Two hundred or three hundred years ago,” she remarks, “you [poets] were always writing about other people. Your pages were crammed with characters of the most opposite and various kinds—Hamlet, Cleopatra, Falstaff.” Woolf admired the strength and versatility of writers who could imaginatively inhabit and portray characters other than themselves. As such, she concludes saying that the best recipe for success in poetry is to “embark upon a long poem in which people as unlike yourself as possible talk at the tops of their voices.” In other words, she advised her friend to write narrative verse. 

Continue Reading

Article |  Fiction

Seeking Certainty in Uncertain Times: Two Historical Novels

Lucy Beckett’s novel The Time Before You Die: A Novel of the Reformation effectively conveys a queasy, uncomfortable immediacy to the whiplash-inducing movements of the Reformation and Counter-Reformation, and subsequent backlash against the Counter-Reformation, in England in the 16th and 17th centuries. Several centuries later, Philip Trower’s A Danger to the State depicts the consequences of the Reformation in the full bloom of the Enlightenment - one of which is that religious truths increasingly serve politically expedient realities.

Humanum: Issues in Family, Culture & Science
Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family
620 Michigan Ave. N.E. (McGivney Hall)
Washington, DC 20064