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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.

article Fiction

Violence and the Recovery of Reality in O'Connor's Prose

Theresa Pihl

For many, an encounter with Flannery O’Connor’s fiction leaves an impression of shocked weirdness. Characters who seem both odd and strangely familiar embroil themselves in lies, seductions, and violence. The violence especially tends to leave the reader wondering “What just happened?” There’s a sense of disorientation, a ringing in the ears, so-to-speak, as O’Connor’s “shout” awakens something that is often difficult to put one’s finger on. One needs a calibrated lens to help see the “depth on depth” of meaning inherent in her stories. No One Was Paying Any Attention to the Sky: Flannery O’Connor and Modernity by Damian Ference serves such a purpose.

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Review |  Film

Gawain, the Green Knight and the Choice between Witchcraft and Sacrament

“Look, see a world that holds more wonders than any since the earth was born . . .”


So begins writer and director David Lowry’s The Green Knight (2021), an adaptation of the 14th century Arthurian legend, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. This first line establishes the theme that animates the film: that our world is stranger than we can ever fathom, full of mystery and enchantment, and it is how we respond to this mystical order that occupies our lives.

Review |  Fiction

Ego and Theo in Rumer Godden's Kingfishers Catch Fire

A claim to familiarity with what is known as “the India novels” of Rumer Godden is like a rare badge of honor for those who consider themselves to be serious readers. Godden, a prolific author of more than sixty works of fiction and non-fiction, is known for the exhilarating way she wields a pen to carve space between the darkness of life’s cruelties and the often blinding light of its sweetness. An Englishwoman, Godden spent her childhood and adult life vacillating between the United Kingdom and South Asia...

Article |  Music

Music: The Art of Time

Music is an unfolding of time. Indeed, music is an art uniquely suited to the exploration of time. We experience time not as a series of disparate moments, loosely joined together by circumstance, but as a revealing, a gathering of life and knowledge together into an anticipable, symphonic whole. Through the unveiling of their music, composers uniquely speak to the mystery of our being in process, of our being accompanied in the movement toward an ultimate end.

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