Monday, November 03, 2025

Forbidden garden

We received word today that the Lang courtyard will be closed off for three to four months due to facade repairs and renovations. In the next days, barriers will block ground-level access, leaving only window views.

Sunday, November 02, 2025

Canonize this!

For the Feast of All Saints, behold this glory, a new work of the queer Episcopalian illustrator Andrew Freshour, "Jesus Christ and the Saints."

In total, I painted fifty saints. It was quite the journey picking them all. I included saints from the Anglican/Episcopal Church, Lutheran Church, Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church, and various Protestant reformers. I also added important Christian civil rights activists and martyrs, like MLK Jr, Jonathan Daniels, and Matthew Shepard.  

I think I've puzzled out another dozen. How many can you divine?

Saturday, November 01, 2025

November!


Friday, October 31, 2025

Job seekers

Attended a presentation on trends and challenges in higher education today, from one of the sources of the materials which were keeping my Provost's Office colleague up at night. Nightmarish indeed was this slide on changes in work. My colleague had mentioned hearing the half-life of job skills keeps shortening part: most workers will need on the job retraining every five years. But the research indicates many workers will not be on the same job at all: Today's workers have not just 12-30 jobs over a lifetime, but multiple careers as well. Twelve to thirty?! Many sectors are included here, but still, wow.

I can't wrap my head around this. The implications for higher ed, the focus of the talk, are perhaps clearer: workers will be regularly needing retraining in and between jobs - a market for adult education, albeit focused on short shelf-life job skills. Us liberal arts types might be the only ones also to see an enhanced need for the "durable skills" of critical thinking, research, communication, ethical reflection, collaboration, etc., too. But what of the workers themselves?

Beyond the matter of commuting and health care, lodging and schools (no small matter any of them!), does this mean most workers will always be on the market, always looking for the next opportunity given the likelihood their current employment won't last? (Is this what young folks mean by learning to "brand yourself"?) How nerve-wracking, how exhausting, even for those who manage to stay ahead of the game, securing a satisfying next gig before the last one peters out. 

But I wonder also what this means existentially, spiritually, since meaningful work is central to a full life. In Theorizing Religion a few weeks ago we reviewed Marx's claim that the forms of personal spirituality emerging already in his time were the sign of a thorough alienation of laborers from their labor. 

Marx worried that work harnessed to the caprice of a commodity market decoupled from actual human need and meaning - manufacturers pay laborers to make whatever sells, workers take whatever jobs are avaiable - voided labor of its meaning to the laborer. A restless and unending calibration of your skills with an ever changing market seems like a more extreme form of this abstraction. 

What religious world would be the "reflex" here? (Reflex isn't a good thing: it's smoke showing there's a fire.) A restless accruing of ever more means to spiritual balance and control? An eclipsing of even a shred of meaning in one's human agency, seeking release instead in mystical, perhaps psychedelically mediated other worlds? The presentiment that this whole world is run by spiritual forces inimical to human values, who can be resisted only through a warfare of charismatic extremity? A quasi-religious exaltation of the apparently unchangeable realities of biological reproduction? A seeking of kinship in forms of life radically unlike the human, from the fungal to the digital to the, well, arboreal?

I think I might take advantage of the relationships with alums I've rekindled for "DIY Religion" to pick their brains about this... 

Thursday, October 30, 2025

All souls

 Someone's kitted out the courtyard for Dia de los Muertos!

LREL S26

We do a lot with a little! 

Please invoke such powers as you know to ensure we get enough students to sign up for these great courses! In the current austerity, the threshold for cancellation is higher than it's been before, and non-major programs like ours need all the help we can get.

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

VOTE!

Palimpsest

I've been through the exhibition now with alums of various generations - one over zoom! - and all concur that it captures the spirit of the place: always changing (indeed, in crisis!) but also reassuringly the same. And each alum made at least a few delighted (re)discoveries! The team that put this together done good! This interactive multi-site narrative about the life of the liberal arts is "unbound" in all the right ways. Bravi us! 

Sunday, October 26, 2025

Trunk line call

4 eyes: better than 2! Look at that tree in the river, I said as we crossed a stream on a visit to friends in central Pennsylvania, wondering how its carcass had been moved into the middle. But my companion thought I meant the other tree, which I had entirely missed, the new one!

Saturday, October 25, 2025

Buzz

Did you know most native bees are not social but solitary? This is a "bee hotel" for them at the Penn State Arboretum's pollinator garden. Cool!

Friday, October 24, 2025

Gone

One of the most important ideas in Timothy Snyder's warnings about tyranny is "don't obey in advance."

Most of the power of authoritarianism is freely given. In times like these, individuals think ahead about what a more repressive government will want, and then offer themselves without being asked. A citizen who adapts in this way is teaching power what it can do. 

I found a chilling example of this in today's Times. From this A Pile of Rubble headline you'd never guess that the president has trashed a wing of the people's house not only without permissions and precautions but without even admitting he was doing so. He said his vanity ballroom would leave the existing structure untouched. Oops. 

The formulation Critics are enraged (as critics always are) while Others say it was time for a change is what anticipatory obedience looks like. It frames a crime against history and tradition as fodder for "X was right about everything." 

But there's even more anticipatory caving to abuse of power in the ratification of his crime. Just a day ago his $300 million ballroom, for which no formal plans have been publicized, let alone reviewed or approved, was a "$250 million ballroom" and just last week it was a "$200 million ballroom." This Makeover will be a temple to bribery!

Thursday, October 23, 2025

Full circle

My series of alumnae/i-led classes in the "DIY Religion" first year seminar came full circle today! 

Our speaker was an anthro-pologist who's just defended a fascinating dissertation on non-Turkish Muslim ummah in Istanbul. But fifteen years ago he was in a first year seminar here himself. It was called "Religion in Dialogue" - with yours truly!