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Jesuit Studies

2024 Second annual Jesuit Lecture

Second Annual Jesuit Lecture: "A Better Kind of Politics," Featuring Sam Sawyer, S.J. In-Person and Livestream

October 3, 2024 | 7–8:30pm CDT
In-person and livestreamed
McCormick Lounge, Coffey Hall, LSC

The Hank Center proudly welcomed Sam Sawyer, S.J., editor of America Media, to speak on the topic of depolarization. Taking place mere weeks before the 2024 U.S. presidential election, the second annual Jesuit Lecture came at a pivotal moment; it responded to the timely opportunity to explore the complex reality of polarization in American society, drawn as it is along political and religious lines.

Event video recording now available.

Inaugural Jesuit Lecture: Bill McCormick, SJ The Christian Structure of Politics: On the De Regno of Thomas Aquinas

March 22, 2023
7:00-8:30 PM CDT
Information Commons, 4th Floor, LSC
In an age dominated by guilt for historical complicity in violence and injustice, how are Christians to engage in public life? Through a reading of Aquinas’ De regno, McCormick argues for a political theology that is both public in its commitment to justice and humble in its awareness of the injustices in which it has been complicit. This event was in-person and livestreamed. It is free & open to the public. Video of the lecture is now available.

Conversations on the Catholic Intellectual Tradition: Catholic Higher Education in the 21st Century <br><i>Nexus Journal Launch</i>

October 14, 2021, 3:30-5:00 PM CDT
Zoom Forum

St. John Paul II proposed in in the landmark Ex Corde Ecclesiae “that a Catholic university unites “the search for the truth with the certainty of already knowing the fount of truth.” Thirty years later, what are the implications and challenges of this “constitution for Catholic higher education” for teachers, researchers, thinkers, and students in Catholic universities? Four Loyola professors and a doctoral student discussed education as the pursuit of truth, the philosophical and pedagogical balance between reason and faith, and challenges encountered in the multicultural landscape of the 21st Century. This event marked the launch of the Hank Center's journal, Nexus: Conversations on the Catholic Intellectual Tradition. Presented in partnership with Mission Integration. This event was free and open to the public. Registration Required

Through the Lens of Data: The Enslaved Community Owned & Sold by the Maryland Province Jesuits

The Center for Textual Studies and Digital Humanities and CCIH were excited to host special guest speaker Sharon Leon of Michigan State University, who talked about her work on the Jesuit Plantation Project. This event also was the first in a new Jesuit Studies Series being offered by the Hank Center.

Jesuit Libraries Project: Final Research Symposium

Over the course of the Fall 2013 semester, graduate students from Loyola’s Digital Humanities, History, and Public History Programs each reconstructed a segment of Loyola’s original library catalogue (c.1878) in an innovative virtual library system.

Mission Church

Music of the Jesuit Missions

The Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage presented its research colloquium: Music of the Jesuit Missions. This colloquium exploreed the history, traditions, and efforts to restore and re-introduce the colonial music of Latin America.

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Jesuits and Sports: Historical Perspectives and Resources for our Times

On January 31, the Hank Center hosted a lecture by Fr. Patrick Kelly, S.J., Associate Professor of Theology and Religious Studies at Seattle University. In his book Catholic Perspective on Sports Fr. Kelly, S.J. provides a historic overview of the changing Catholic views towards sports, broadens traditional understanding of the interconnectedness between spirituality and athletics, and explains why this topic has been neglected by scholars. The author offers new insights on the contributions of Catholic thought and its relevance to sports today.

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