University of Notre Dame Press Spring 2025 Catalog

Page 1


2025

of Venezuela: Scorched Earth Politics and Economic Decline, 2012–2020, Francisco Rodríguez

Opportunities for Learning: A Sociological Perspective, Maureen T. Hallinan

17 Touch the Wounds: On Suffering, Trust, and Transformation, Tomáš Halík, paperback

18 Renewing Theology: Ignatian Spirituality and Karl Rahner, Ignacio Ellacuría, and Pope Francis, J. Matthew Ashley, paperback

19 Pope Francis and Mercy: A Dynamic Theological Hermeneutic, Gill K. Goulding, CJ, paperback

20 Aquinas’s Eschatological Ethics and the Virtue of Temperance, Matthew Levering, paperback

21 Quill and Cross in the Borderlands: Sor María de Ágreda and the Lady in Blue, 1628 to the Present, Anna M. Nogar, paperback

22 Aristotle’s Discovery of the Human: Piety and Politics in the “Nicomachean Ethics”, Mary P. Nichols, paperback

23 Faith, Nationalism, and the Future of Liberal Democracy, David M. Elcott, C. Colt Anderson, Tobias Cremer, Volker Haarmann, paperback

24 The Limits of Liberalism: Tradition, Individualism, and the Crisis of Freedom, Mark T. Mitchell, paperback

25 The Collapse of Freedom of Expression: Reconstructing the Ancient Roots of Modern Liberty, Jordi Pujol, paperback

26 German Conquistadors in Venezuela: The Welsers’ Colony, Racialized Capitalism, and Cultural Memory, Giovanna Montenegro, paperback

27 Studies in the Age of Chaucer: Volume 46, Michelle Karnes (editor), Misty Schieberle (editor)

28 Recently Announced

30 Return of a Classic for Our 75th Anniversary

31 2023-2024 at a Glance

33 Indexes

34 Sales Representatives

35 Orders and Customer Service

36 Ebooks

LETTER FROM THE DIRECTOR

This year, the University of Notre Dame Press celebrates 75 years of publishing exceptional books that engage with the most challenging and enduring questions of our times. From its inception on August 17, 1949, the Press has encouraged, curated, and disseminated scholarship that has simultaneously drawn from and contributed to the Catholic intellectual tradition. Within years of its founding, the Press broadened its offerings to reflect the academic strengths of the University, particularly in religion, philosophy, medieval studies, mathematics, and international studies. By its 25th anniversary, the Press had built deeply respected lists in religion, philosophy, and theology, and was recognized as a premier publisher of Chicano studies.

Now in its 75th year, Notre Dame Press has established itself as a leading academic publisher in religion, philosophy, political science, American history, medieval studies, and Latin American studies. The Press has built an intellectually innovative and financially sustainable publishing program, pioneered new educational programming for students and faculty, and expanded the global reach and impact of its publications. In recent years, the Press has strengthened its partnerships within the University and among numerous scholarly communities, filling an essential role in research and communication both on campus and around the world, while also offering educational opportunities and resources to scholars and students to aid them in publishing their work and investigating new career opportunities.

The Press’s past successes are matched only by our ambitions for the future—not content with merely celebrating our achievements this anniversary, we have implemented a new strategic vision for the future direction and aspirations of Notre Dame Press. Just as the University of Notre Dame has committed itself to becoming the leading global Catholic research university, so too is the Press committed to becoming a recognized leader in our core publishing areas.

As demonstrated in this catalog, we are expanding our publication of insightful, essential books that explore and illuminate some of the most pressing intellectual and moral debates of the modern age, with forthcoming publications on religious persecution, ethics in medicine, and the increasing threats to democracy around the globe. With the expertise of our authors and staff and our solid foundation within the Catholic intellectual tradition, the Press is uniquely poised to publish and promote innovative, significant, and diverse scholarship in the pursuit of greater knowledge and understanding.

I hope you will join us in celebrating the Press’s success over the past 75 years and in cultivating even greater accomplishments in the years to come.

University of Notre Dame Press

9780268208585

Pub Date: 4/1/2025

$28.00

Discount Code: t Hardcover

208 Pages

8.5 in H | 5.5 in W

Literary Collections / Russian & Former Soviet Union

Series: The Center for Ethics and Culture Solzhenitsyn Series

We Have Ceased to See the Purpose

Essential Speeches of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Ignat Solzhenitsyn (editor)

Summary

This collection brings together ten of Nobel Prize–winner Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s most memorable and consequential speeches, delivered in the West and in Russia between 1972 and 1997.

Following his exile from the USSR in 1974, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn lived and traveled in the West for twenty years before the fall of Communism allowed him to return home to Russia. The majority of the speeches collected in this volume straddle this period of exile, contemplating the materialism prevalent worldwide—forcibly imposed in the socialist East, freely chosen in the capitalist West—and searching for humanity’s possible paths forward. In beautiful yet haunting and prophetic prose, Solzhenitsyn explores the mysterious purpose of art, the two-edged nature of limitless freedom, the decline of faith in favor of legalistic secularism, and—perhaps most centrally—the power of literature, art, and culture to elevate the human spirit.

These annotated speeches, including his timeless “Nobel Lecture” and “Harvard Address,” have been rendered in English by skilled translators, including Solzhenitsyn’s sons. The volume includes an introduction to the speeches, brief background information about each speech, and a timeline of the key dates in Solzhenitsyn’s life.

Contributor Bios

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1918–2008), Nobel Prize laureate in literature, was a Soviet political prisoner from 1945 to 1953. His story One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (1962) made him famous, and The Gulag Archipelago (1973) further unmasked Communism and played a critical role in its eventual defeat. Solzhenitsyn was exiled to the West in 1974. He ultimately published dozens of plays, poems, novels, and works of history, nonfiction, and memoir, including In the First Circle, Cancer Ward, The Red Wheel, The Oak and the Calf, and Between Two Millstones, Book 2: Exile in America, 1978–1994

Ignat Solzhenitsyn is a pianist and conductor based in New York City. The middle son of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, he is the translator and editor of several of his father’s works in English.

Quotes

“This welcome selection of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's most penetrating speeches appeal to, and renew, the ‘sparks of the spirit’ that alone offer hope in this and other troubled times.” —Daniel J. Mahoney, co-editor of The Solzhenitsyn Reader

“The totalitarianism from which Solzhenitsyn had escaped loomed as the West’s likely future. . . . He thought it his duty to warn us, but nobody listened. Today, his warnings seem prescient.” —Commentary

9780268209445

Pub Date: 5/1/2025

$42.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

280 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Philosophy / Political

Series: Catholic Ideas for a Secular World

Challenging Modern Atheism and Indifference

Pascal’s Defense of the Christian Proposition

Pierre Manent, Paul Seaton (translator), Daniel J. Mahoney (foreword)

Summary

Challenging Modern Atheism and Indifference is the first English translation of Pierre Manent’s penetrating engagement with the seventeenth-century polymath and apologist for the Christian faith, Blaise Pascal.

Blaise Pascal (1623–1662) was the first Christian apologist to address modern human beings on their own terms and present a defense of the Christian religion that still resonates today. A major publishing and intellectual event in France when it first appeared in 2022, Challenging Modern Atheism and Indifference is Pierre Manent’s investigation of Pascal’s exploration of Christianity in the wake of a sharp atheistic turn at the dawn of the modern state and modern science. Comprehensive in scope and profound in treatment, this engagement with all of Pascal’s writings, including his famous Pensées, appeals to the reader’s head and heart. Manent emphasizes the joy that comes from engaging the truth of faith, and he argues that we are diminished by forgetting the unique and distinctive contributions of Christianity.

More than brilliant exegesis, Manent enlists Pascal in a much greater endeavor: to make what he calls “the Christian proposition” concerning God and man intelligible to Europeans who have made it their business to ignore the religion that founded Europe and the larger Western world.

Contributor Bios

Pierre Manent is professor emeritus of political philosophy at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales. He is the author of numerous books, including Montaigne: Life without Law (University of Notre Dame Press, 2020).

Paul Seaton is the Richard and Barbara Fisher Professor of Philosophy at St. Mary’s Seminary & University. He has translated multiple works from French to English, including books by Rémi Brague, Chantal Delsol, and Pierre Manent.

Daniel J. Mahoney is a a senior fellow at the Claremont Institute and professor emeritus at Assumption University.

Quotes

“Manent ventures boldly into the centuries-long conversation on the interpretation of Pascal, armed with a lifetime of deep study of the human condition, and distracted by no concern or agenda other than to see the truth in all possible clarity The fruit of his effort is a sustained and multifaceted reflection that is clearly an epochal contribution to Pascal studies and gift of the highest value to all those who ponder what it means to be human.”

—Ralph C. Hancock, author of Calvin and the Foundation of Modern Politics

“Manent turns to Pascal to recover the distinctiveness of the Christian proposition, to remind contemporary readers what Christianity is, and why it matters.”

—Thomas S. Hibbs, author of A Theology of Creation

9780268209469

Pub Date: 5/1/2025

$38.00

Discount Code: t

Hardcover

272 Pages

10 b&w illustrations

9 in H | 6 in W

Biography & Autobiography / Adventurers & Explorers

The Glacier Priest

Father Bernard Hubbard and America’s Last Frontier Josh McMullen

Summary

Discover the true story of the Jesuit priest, explorer, geologist, and photographer who brought the wilds of Alaska—and his Catholic faith—to the American public.

In The Glacier Priest, Josh McMullen reveals the captivating life and legacy of Father Bernard R. Hubbard, a devout priest and a national celebrity, a rugged outdoorsman and a passionate promoter. From the late 1920s through the 1950s, the famous Glacier Priest and his dogs connected millions of Americans with the pioneering spirit of Alaska and his vision of the wilderness as the salvation of the nation’s soul. From celebrating Mass in the shadow of mighty Mount Katmai to mushing a dog sled team 1600 miles to five missionary bases, Hubbard’s stories of frontier adventure captured the hearts of Americans and paved the way toward Alaskan statehood and a greater integration of Catholics into American society.

The Glacier Priest seamlessly blends Father Hubbard’s rollicking adventures, the tensions underlying his larger-than-life persona, and the fascinating context that cements his legacy within American history.

Contributor Bio

Josh McMullen is dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Regent University. He is author of Under the Big Top: Big Tent Revivalism and American Culture, 1885–1925 and a contributor to The Oxford Handbook of Christian Fundamentalism.

Quotes

“The Glacier Priest is a real joy to read and a tremendous contribution to the field of modern U.S. Catholic history.” —Jack Lee Downey, author of The Bread of the Strong

9780268209346

Pub Date: 4/1/2025

$45.00

Discount Code: t

Hardcover

480 Pages

26 b&w illustrations, 2 tables 9 in H | 6 in W

History / United States

Faith of the Fathers

The Comprehensive History of Catholic Chaplains in the Civil War

Robert J. Miller, James M. McPherson (foreword)

Summary

Faith of the Fathers provides a captivating collective biography of the Catholic priests who served in America’s most deadly war.

Faith of the Fathers brings to light the forgotten stories of courageous chaplains whose commitments to faith and to men at war during America’s most divisive conflict have long been overlooked. The Reverend Robert J. Miller provides a comprehensive and compelling portrait of the 126 priest-chaplains who served during the Civil War and reflects on the importance of religion and faith in nineteenth-century America. As a culture of death and horror raged around them, Catholic priest-chaplains met the needs of soldiers and officers alike, providing years of faithful and dedicated service in hospitals, prisons, battlefields, and camps.

Whether ministering to Union or Confederate soldiers (or both), in eastern or western theaters, in battle or camp, these priests risked their lives to bring faith and hope to one of the darkest and most devastating periods of American history.

Contributor Bio

The Reverend Robert J. Miller is a retired Catholic priest, scholar, and former president of the Chicago Civil War Round Table. He is author of six books, including Both Prayed to the Same God: Religion and Faith in the American Civil War.

James M. McPherson is an American historian specializing in the American Civil War. He is the George Henry Davis ’86 Professor Emeritus of United States History at Princeton University. He received the 1989 Pulitzer Prize for Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era

Quotes

“Robert Miller’s thorough research, impeccable scholarship, and lucid writing have filled a large gap in Civil War scholarship.” —James M. McPherson, author of Battle Cry for Freedom

“This lively, compelling, and very complete story of Catholic chaplains will delight Civil War and American religious historians, students, and general readers.” —John Patrick Daly, author of The War after the War

9780268209223

Pub Date: 4/15/2025

$55.00

Discount Code: x

280 Pages

9 in H | 6 in W

Religion / Christianity

Women in the Orthodox Tradition Feminism, Theology, and Equality

Ashley Marie Purpura

Summary

Women in the Orthodox Tradition brings feminist insights into dialogue with Orthodox Christianity to theologically identify and respond to challenges of gender equality.

Orthodox Christianity places great importance upon tradition, from doctrinal formulas and sainted teachings to festal commemorations and a hymnic liturgy. But what does this mean for women who are often missing, misrepresented, or outnumbered in the androcentric historical tradition? Women in the Orthodox Tradition engages with feminist insights to argue that ignoring this bias in Christian tradition is theologically problematic for Orthodox faith. By critically examining the spiritual values that shape Orthodoxy, the commemorations of women saints within it, and liturgical and doctrinal expressions that shape it, author Ashley Marie Purpura makes the case that it is theologically necessary to unsay the patriarchal limits of tradition and seek a more inclusive interpretation instead.

In acknowledging the messy entanglement between tradition, theology, and historical patriarchal values, Women in the Orthodox Tradition advocates for women’s voices, contributions, and diverse humanity within the church.

Contributor Bio

Ashley Marie Purpura is an associate professor of religion in the School of Interdisciplinary Studies at Purdue University She is the author of God, Hierarchy, and Power: Orthodox Theologies of Authority from Byzantium, and co-editor of Orthodox Tradition and Human Sexuality and Rethinking Gender in Orthodox Christianity.

Quotes

“A compelling and bold example of Orthodox feminist theology, Purpura lays bare the theological inequalities and social challenges Orthodox Christian women have and continue to face, asking us to reckon with systemic oppression and patriarchal androcentrism.” —Sarah Riccardi-Swartz, author of Between Heaven and Russia

“This is the first book-length attempt to bring feminist theory and theology into conversation with women in the Orthodox Church. That alone makes it invaluable.”

—Carrie Frederick Frost, author of Church of Our Granddaughters

9780268209186

Pub Date: 4/1/2025

$65.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

496 Pages

34 color illustrations, 2 tables 9.2 in H | 6.1 in W

Religion / Christianity

The Invisibility of Religion in Contemporary Art

Summary

The Invisibility of Religion in Contemporary Art offers a critical guide for rereading and rethinking religion in the histories of modern and contemporary art.

Since the turn of the twenty-first century, there has been a marked increase in attention to religion and spirituality in contemporary art among artists and scholars alike, but the resulting scholarship tends to be dispersed, disjointed, and underdeveloped, lacking a sustained discourse that holds up as both scholarship of art and as scholarship of religion. The Invisibility of Religion in Contemporary Art is both a critical study of this situation and an adjustment to it, offering a much-needed field guide to the current discourse of contemporary art and religion. By connecting the work of leading art historians, theologians, philosophers, and sociologists, Jonathan A. Anderson uncovers the gaps and reveals opportunities for scholars to engage more fully with the theological grammars, histories, and concepts at play in modern and contemporary art.

By addressing the religious blind spots in existing scholarship, Anderson opens new lines of inquiry and invites deeper dialogue among religious studies, theology, and art history and criticism.

Contributor Bio

Jonathan A. Anderson is the Eugene and Jan Peterson Associate Professor of Theology and the Arts at Regent College. He is the co-author of the book Modern Art and the Life of a Culture: The Religious Impulses of Modernism.

Quotes

“Anderson presents an incisive and compelling study, exhibiting herein a clear command of the fields of art criticism and religious studies. This book represents an important contribution to the field of theology and the arts, and is a must-read for both scholars and practitioners.” —W. David O. Taylor, author of A Body of Praise

“This book is an iteration of a new generation of scholarship that seeks to move beyond the frame that has defined the art-religion-theology landscape for the last two generations. Anderson suggests that to write about the visual arts, even and especially those practices that are not explicitly religious, is itself a theological practice.” —Daniel A. Siedell, author of Who’s Afraid of Modern Art?

9780268209261

Pub Date: 3/1/2025

$40.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

234 Pages

1 table 9 in H | 6 in W

Philosophy / Ethics & Moral Philosophy

Series: Catholic Ideas for a Secular World

Ethics, Politics, and Natural Law Principles for Human Flourishing

Summary

A rigorous but accessible overview of the new natural law account of ethics and political philosophy.

The foundational principles of ethics and politics are principles that guide us to respect and promote human flourishing. In Ethics, Politics, and Natural Law Melissa Moschella provides an accessible introduction for the new natural law account of these principles while clarifying common misconceptions.

As a commonsense ethical theory, natural law grounds ethics in the fundamental dimensions of human flourishing Taking into account social and political aspects, Moschella lays out the basic principles of natural law and their relationship to the virtues. She considers the importance of communities for flourishing, explaining how they should shape our understanding of justice and the common good, and showing how natural law principles support limited government and civil liberties. She also discusses the relationship between morality and God, and how the natural law account relates to Christian revelation. This fresh and compelling exploration of new natural law is the go-to resource to understand this important and influential theory.

Contributor Bios

Melissa Moschella is a professor of the practice in philosophy at the University of Notre Dame’s McGrath Institute for Church Life. She is the author of To Whom Do Children Belong? Parental Rights, Civic Education, and Children’s Autonomy

Russell Hittinger is the Executive Director of the Institute for Human Ecology and cofounder of the Program on Catholic Political Thought at the Catholic University of America.

Quotes

“Melissa Moschella’s Ethics, Politics, and Natural Law is the most readable and accessible articulation of ‘New’ Natural Law Theory I have read in the field. I recommend the volume to ethics enthusiasts everywhere, but especially to Protestant audiences that tend to produce a voluntarist and divine command account of ethics to the neglect of articulating how and why God’s moral decrees are also eminently reasonable.” —Andrew T Walker, author of Faithful Reason

“Is it the case, and, if so, how is it the case, that the human intellect can grasp reasons—including moral reasons—for choice and action? In Ethics, Politics, and Natural Law, Melissa Moschella provides persuasive answers to these questions as well as a cogent account of those reasons. Her book represents the clearest, most readable exposition and defense of contemporary natural law theory yet to appear.” — Robert P George, author of Conscience and Its Enemies

9780268209551

Pub Date: 5/15/2025

$40.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

216 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Political Science / Political Ideologies

Liberal Education and Democracy

Bob Pepperman Taylor

Summary

Liberal Education and Democracy addresses three vital arguments for liberal education and its integral relationship to democracy.

Liberal education is currently under attack as both politically subversive and economically impractical. In Liberal Education and Democracy, Bob Pepperman Taylor evaluates both the defenses that have been offered for liberal education and the complex relationship between liberal education and democracy. He offers a compelling case for maintaining a strong commitment to this form of education as an essential good for all citizens.

His three primary arguments for liberal education are that it prepares students to be useful contributors to the economy, that it prepares citizens to be thoughtful and responsible, and that it can stimulate students to experience the delight of intellectual exploration and understanding. Taylor moves through each of these arguments and concludes that the seemingly least practical of them may in fact be the most powerful. He gives an insightful glimpse into the current democratic climate and through thorough examination argues that democracies need liberal education as much as liberal learning requires the freedom of democratic societies.

Contributor Bio

Bob Pepperman Taylor is the Elliott A. Brown Green and Gold Professor of Law, Politics, and Political Behavior at the University of Vermont. He is the author of Lessons from Walden: Thoreau and the Crisis of American Democracy, which was named the winner of the American Political Science Association section award for the best book of 2020 in American political thought.

Quotes

“Bob Pepperman Taylor provides a thoughtful commentary that is timely and provocative as American higher education faces reconsideration, including external pressures to explain and even justify its missions and offerings within the framework of American society, economics, and political systems of belief and action.” —John R. Thelin, author of A History of American Higher Education

“At a time when liberal education has been subject to critique both from within and outside the academy, this book is a serious and careful defense of the merits of teaching and studying the liberal arts.” —Susan McWilliams Barndt, author of The American Road Trip and American Political Thought

9780268209155

Pub Date: 4/15/2025

$38.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

256 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Political Science / Religion, Politics & State

Series: The Beginning and the Beyond of Politics

The Controversial Thomas More Politics, Polemics, and Prison Writings

Travis Curtright

Summary

The Controversial Thomas More offers an original and critical intervention on the writings of Thomas More and his opposition to King Henry VIII.

Thomas More is known for refusing the oath of succession and remaining silent about his reasons for doing so. His prison literature, however, tells a different story. Under the threat of execution, More waged an astonishingly prolific and often coded writing campaign in rebuke of King Henry VIII’s claim to be supreme head of the Church in England. Travis Curtright’s groundbreaking book shows how William Rastell, More’s nephew and printer, fashioned a historically inaccurate depiction of More, one that persists to this day. He asserted while imprisoned in the Tower of London, More stopped his polemical writing and turned his mind exclusively toward heaven. In contrast, Curtright proves that More’s prison writings are not just devotional literature but also a powerful defense of a united Church under the pope, reestablishing More as a key political and religious thinker, defiant of King Henry VIII.

Most scholars restrict More’s political thought to his Utopia, but The Controversial Thomas More shows how his prison writings best reveal his ideas of political unity and authority, and is a reconsideration of More’s legacy and place in the history of the Henrician Reformation.

Contributor Bio

Travis Curtright is professor of humanities and literature at Ave Maria University. He is the author or editor of four previous books, including The One Thomas More, and is the editor-in-chief of Moreana: Thomas More and Renaissance Studies.

Quotes

“Anyone who wants to know what the ‘man for all seasons’ was really thinking and writing about over the fifteen months of his imprisonment in the Tower of London should read this book.” —Stephen W. Smith, co-editor of The Essential Works of Thomas More

“Curtright shows that More’s prison writings are not, as widely thought, meditations of a saint resigned to death, but the continuation of a complex literary project aiming to restore the unity of Christendom. Must reading for More scholars and a civic challenge to all More’s admirers.” —James R. Stoner, author of Common-Law and Liberal Theory

9780268208974

Pub Date: 3/15/2025

$65.00

Discount Code: x

304 Pages

3 tables 9 in H | 6 in W

Political Science / Political Economy

The Price of the Common Good Markets,

Corporations, and Political Economy

Summary

The Price of the Common Good offers a fresh perspective on economic prosperity and solidarity that emphasizes communal interests.

There is more at stake in market economies than self-interest or making money. Lying just below the surface, there are shared projects answering the deepest political questions of how we live together and who we become. The Price of the Common Good exposes the inadequacies of the prevailing individualistic vision of markets and firms and develops an incisive new framework for analyzing the shared goods that are always in play. To get a purchase on the full moral architecture of markets and firms, Mark Hoipkemier recovers the classical idiom of the “common good” for today’s economy.

Hoipkemier argues not that economic institutions should ideally embody communal purposes, but that they already do. Engaging with leading political economists, he shows the centrality of common goods in real-world institutions with examples such as Uber, corporation law, and globalized auto manufacturing. The Price of the Common Good offers both the defenders and critics of the market a richer way of deliberating about the shared concerns in markets and firms as they are and as they should be.

Contributor Bio

Mark Hoipkemier is an assistant professor in the program on Politics, Philosophy, and Economics at the University of Navarra.

Quotes

“The book is one of the most important I have read in decades, and is essential foundational reading for all those in economics, politics, and ethics who seek flourishing businesses in a flourishing society.” —David Cloutier, author of The Vice of Luxury

“Mark Hoipkemier does not hesitate to tackle the difficult task of convincing a skeptical world that corporations and markets are not purely private, profit-driven affairs. He substantially enriches our ability to understand the location of these institutions on the border of the private and the common good.” —Andrew M. Yuengert, author of Approximating Prudence

9780268208639

Pub Date: 3/15/2025

$65.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

340 Pages

1 b&w illustration

9 in H | 6 in W

Religion / Christian Theology

An Analogy of Grace

Summary

An Analogy of Grace proposes a deeply grounded investigation of grace and a robustly balanced impetus for advancing the gospel in the twenty-first century.

Amid the present decline in religious affiliation, a pervasive question for many is “why bother” with faith and its practices. An Analogy of Grace engages this question in the context of grace, or our participation in the life and love of God, and investigates the difference made by the diverse ways in which the self-communication of God is received and participated. Shea begins with the contrasting models provided by twentieth-century theologians Karl Rahner and Hans Urs von Balthasar Rahner focused on how grace is universally accessible within the heart, while Balthasar envisioned grace as found principally through an encounter with the incarnate Word. Henry Shea charts a course within and beyond this difference, bolstered by fresh and insightful analysis of the work of Erich Przywara, Henri de Lubac, and other major theologians.

An Analogy of Grace posits that grace is best understood as a moving Trinitarian analogy that begins in the heart and advances through the incarnate Word in the Spirit toward the whole Christ. This new analogy of grace is radically universal and inclusive while also wholly informed by the distinct form of Jesus Christ.

Contributor Bio

Henry Shea, S.J., is assistant professor of theology at Boston College.

Quotes

“Readers will find in this book a penetrating analysis of Rahner and Balthasar, as well as a creative retrieval of Przywara. I can think of no other book that brings together such a deep knowledge of all three authors and places it in the service of a theological vision irreducible to any of them.” —Aaron Pidel, S.J., author of Church of the Ever Greater God

“An Analogy of Grace is deep, balanced, and insightful. The questions it looks at are perennially important, and all the more so in a multi-religious world.” —Andrew Davison, author of Participation in God

9780268209124

Pub Date: 2/15/2025

$70.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

390 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Religion / Christianity

Series: Liu Institute Series in Chinese Christianities

Translingual Catholics

Chinese Theologians before Vatican II

Jin Lu

Summary

Translingual Catholics explores the life experiences and theological writings of twentieth-century Chinese Catholic intellectuals and their impact on global Catholic theology.

Weaving together archival resources in Chinese, French, and English, Translingual Catholics examines the preconciliar theological contribution of Republican-Era Chinese Catholics to global Catholicism and to the dialogue between Christianity and Chinese spiritual traditions. Author Jin Lu sheds light on generations of multilingual Chinese Catholic intellectuals who participated in the elaboration of Catholic theology leading up to the Second Vatican Council. This book situates the lives and works of these theologians in the intersecting global Catholic networks of the time, especially the Jesuit enclave of Xujiahui in Shanghai, the Benedictine Abbey of Saint-André in Bruges, Belgium, the Jesuit Theologate in Lyon-Fourvière, and the ecumenical Cercle SaintJean-Baptiste in Paris. By studying the interconnectedness of Chinese Catholic theologians working in multiple languages, Lu demonstrates that inculturation is necessarily a translingual process.

Through its groundbreaking archival research, Translingual Catholics tells the story of these underappreciated intellectuals and uncovers significant contributions to Chinese and global Catholic theology.

Contributor Bio

Jin Lu is a professor of French at Purdue University Northwest. She is the author of Éléments d’une enquête sur l’usage d’un mot au siècle des Lumières.

Quotes

“Rather than confining Chinese Catholicism to its linguistic world and internal issues, Jin Lu considers Chinese Catholic intellectuals as polyglot actors inserted into the epochal change that Catholicism has experienced during the twentieth century. Such a shift of perspective makes this work significant from the start.” —Benoît Vermander, author of The Encounter of Chinese and Western Philosophies

“Translingual Catholics narrates the overlooked contributions of Catholic intellectuals of twentieth-century China, correcting the unbalanced nature of scholarship on Chinese Christianities, which has hitherto been preoccupied by the Protestant story. Drawing on French, English, and Chinese sources, this book offers a glimpse into World Christianity as seen through the eyes of translingual Chinese Catholics—beyond the limits of the ‘Sino-Foreign Protestant Establishment.’ Jin Lu has done us a tremendous service.” —Alexander Chow, author of Chinese Public Theology

9780268209315

Pub Date: 5/15/2025

$35.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

246 Pages

2 b&w illustrations, 2 maps, 6 tables

9 in H | 6 in W

Political Science / World

Series: Contending Modernities

Shari`a, Citizenship, and Identity in Aceh

Summary

Shari`a, Citizenship, and identity in Aceh presents both an ethnographic and a sociohistorical account of identity making among both the Muslim majority population and different minority groups in Aceh, Indonesia.

Diverging from previous studies on majority-minority group relations in a predominantly Muslim country that tend to engage solely with one group’s experiences, Shari`a, Citizenship, and Identity in Aceh argues that the majority and minority groups in Aceh, Indonesia, have interactively and mutually created conceptions of identity and recognition that have significant implications on the experience of citizenship in the region. The authors provide not only a narrative of majority-minority group encounters in a variety of issues, but also a wide-ranging account of struggles from both the Muslim majority and non-Muslim minority groups for recognition of their own identity in the public space. To what extent do minority groups feel that they belong to Aceh’s communal identity, which is mostly Islamic? And what kind of citizenship is in place when minorities feel marginalized living under Aceh’s Islamic rules?

Shari`a, Citizenship, and Identity in Aceh debunks the concept of citizenship by way of deploying the concept of the politics of recognition against the politics of the dominant culture theory. It looks further at how equal citizenship in a democratic political system has been negotiated and compromised, and how the politics of dominant culture has caused a sense of shared ownership to be largely deficient and vague in Aceh.

Contributor Bios

Arskal Salim is Professor of Politics of Islamic Law at Syarif Hidayatullah State Islamic University Jakarta, Indonesia. He is the author of many books, including Challenging the Secular State: The Islamization of Laws in Modern Indonesia and Contemporary Islamic Law in Indonesia: Sharia and Legal Pluralism.

Moch. Nur Ichwan is Professor of Islamic Social and Political Sciences at Sunan Kalijaga State Islamic University, Yogyakarta. His articles appear in a number of international journals, such as Islamic Law and Society; Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations; Journal of Islamic Studies; Politics, Religion & Ideology; and Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde (BKI).

Eka Srimulyani is professor of sociology at Ar-Raniry State Islamic University in Banda Aceh, Indonesia. She has written many articles and is the author of Women from Traditional Islamic Educational Institutions in Indonesia.

Marzi Afriko is a research assistant specializing in studies of the provincial and district governments of Aceh, Indonesia. He has contributed to multiple papers and studies on the region.

Quotes

“A welcome addition to the literature on Aceh. There are a lot of publications on the Shari`a project, and a few things on religious minorities in Aceh, as well as a lot of uniformed assumptions about both; however, I cannot think of any work that brings all of this together.” —Dan Birchok, University of Michigan-Flint

9780268209018

Pub Date: 2/15/2025

$75.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

506 Pages

52 b&w illustrations, 12 tables 9 in H | 6 in W

Political Science / Political Economy

Series: Kellogg Institute Series on Democracy and Development

The Collapse of Venezuela

Scorched Earth Politics and Economic Decline, 2012–2020 Francisco Rodríguez

Summary

The Collapse of Venezuela documents Venezuela’s economic implosion as politicians adopted strategies that severely harmed the economy in their struggle for power.

Between 2012 and 2020, Venezuela suffered the largest economic contraction ever documented outside of wartime. This collapse was caused not just by the failure of an economic model but also the deeper failure of its political system to manage the conflicts inherent to a polarized society. The Collapse of Venezuela argues that when the stakes of power are high, politicians have an incentive to adopt political strategies that directly harm the economy. Author Francisco Rodríguez describes these scorched earth strategies and shows how politicians used these methods to target the Venezuelan economy in their fight for power. Ultimately, the conflicting sides have trapped the economy in a catastrophic stalemate that has destroyed the country’s living standards and turned the economy into a political battlefield.

By charting Venezuela’s experience with scorched earth politics, Rodríguez reveals an essential cautionary tale for other democracies around the globe.

Contributor Bio

Francisco Rodríguez is the Rice Family Professor of the Practice of International and Public Affairs at the University of Denver’s Josef Korbel School of International Studies. He is the co-editor of Venezuela before Chávez: Anatomy of an Economic Collapse.

Quotes

“The Collapse of Venezuela is the definitive account of the collapse of the Venezuelan economy. Rodríguez provides not only a page-turning play-by-play of the economic policy decisions that destroyed more than 70 percent of Venezuela’s GDP but also a startling new theory of economically destructive political conflict.” —Dorothy Kronick, University of California, Berkeley

9780268209391

Pub Date: 6/15/2025

$85.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

600 Pages

54 tables, 10 graphs 9 in H | 6 in W

Education / Philosophy, Theory & Social Aspects

Series: Catholic Schools and the Common Good

Opportunities for Learning A

Sociological Perspective

Maureen T. Hallinan, Elizabeth Covay Minor (editor), Mark Berends (editor), Barbara Schneider (editor)

Summary

Opportunities for Learning brings together the works of one of the most highly regarded past presidents of the American Sociological Association, focusing on uncovering and addressing educational inequities in elementary and secondary schools.

Few sociologists of education can rival the depth and breadth of Maureen T Hallinan’s contributions to the field. This book compiles her writings, some of which have never been published before, to bring the full insight of both her sociological imagination and her theoretical and empirical research. Through articles, book chapters, and invited lectures, Hallinan explores the interplay among theory, research, and policy. Other pieces focus on the importance of opportunities to learn, peer friendships, and ability grouping for instruction. She writes in depth about various attempts of educational reform and the effects of Catholic schools. Hallinan sought to address the enduring problems of sociological theorizing and research within education, and her writings contribute important insights and provide foundations for the next generation of social scientists.

This collection demonstrates Hallinan’s keen ability to communicate balanced inquiry by engaging multiple perspectives in her theoretical framework coupled with strong empirical testing of the relationships.

Contributor Bio

Maureen T. Hallinan (1940–2014) was the founding director of the University of Notre Dame’s Institute for Educational Initiatives and the Center for Research on Educational Opportunity. A celebrated teacher and colleague, Hallinan was the author of more than 120 articles in professional journals and the editor of eight books.

Elizabeth Covay Minor is the director of Educational Leadership Studies and associate professor at National Louis University. She is the author of multiple articles and serves as a co-editor for i.e.: inquiry

Mark Berends is a professor of sociology at the University of Notre Dame. He has numerous scholarly publications, including co-editing Handbook of Research on School Choice, 2nd edition.

Barbara Schneider is the John A. Hannah University Distinguished Professor in the College of Education and Department of Sociology at Michigan State University. She has published nineteen books and more than one hundred articles and reports, including co-authoring Learning Science: The Value of Crafting Engagement in Science Environments.

Quotes

“Opportunities for Learning highlights the expanse of Maureen Hallinan’s research. Her considerable contributions to sociology, education, and especially Catholic education continue to be impactful today. I admired her as an eminent scholar and appreciated her incisive wit. We were fortunate to have her as part of the Notre Dame community.”

—Rev Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C., President, University of Notre Dame

“This book is a treasure trove of enduring studies. It will be an essential resource for teaching and research on children and their schools, especially when it comes to understanding friendships, values, and classroom organization ” —Adam Gamoran, President of William T. Grant Foundation

9780268204907

Pub Date: 3/1/2025

$22.00

Discount Code: t Paperback

170 Pages

8.5 in H | 5.5 in W

Religion / Faith

Touch the Wounds

On Suffering, Trust, and Transformation

New in Paperback

In this masterfully written book, Tomáš Halík calls upon Christians to touch the wounds of the world and to rediscover their own faith by loving and healing their neighbors.

One of the most important voices in contemporary Catholicism, Tomáš Halík argues that Christians can discover the clearest vision of God not by turning away from suffering but by confronting it. Halík calls upon us to follow the apostle Thomas’s example: to see the pain, suffering, and poverty of our world and to touch those wounds with faith and action. It is those expressions of love and service, Halík reveals, that restore our hope and the courage to live, allowing true holiness to manifest itself. Only face-to-face with a wounded Christ can we lay down our armor and masks, revealing our own wounds and allowing healing to begin.

Weaving together deep theological and philosophical reflections with surprising, trenchant, and even humorous commentary on the times in which we live, Halík offers a new prescription for those lost in moments of doubt, abandonment, or suffering. Rather than demanding impossible, flawless faith, we can look through our doubt to see, touch, and confront the wounds in the hearts of our neighbors and—through that wounded humanity, which the Son of God took upon himself—see God.

Contributor Bios

Tomáš Halík is a Czech Roman Catholic priest, philosopher, theologian, and scholar He is a professor of sociology at Charles University in Prague, pastor of the Academic Parish by St. Salvator Church in Prague, president of the Czech Christian Academy, and a winner of the Templeton Prize. His books, which are bestsellers in his own country, have been translated into nineteen languages and have received several literary prizes. His previous books with University of Notre Dame Press, I Want You to Be and From the Underground Church to Freedom, won the Foreword Reviews’ INDIES Book of the Year Awards in Philosophy and in Religion, respectively.

Gerald Turner has translated numerous Czech authors, including Václav Havel, Ivan Klíma, and Ludvík Vaculík, among others. He received the US PEN Translation Award in 2004.

Quotes

“Masterfully translated—conveying both the insights and personality of Halík—by the distinguished Gerald Turner. . . . A balm to the soul for those who are battered by this world and find their own faith wounded.” —Scottish Journal of Theology

“A rich tapestry capable of nourishing and sustaining Christian faith and theology in a shifting cultural context. . . . Halík offers hope in rebuilding faith through facing up to the challenges of a future for which our recent past has not fully prepared us.” Modern Theology

9780268203184

Pub Date: 1/15/2025

$45.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

432 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Religion / Christian Theology

Renewing Theology

Ignatian Spirituality and Karl Rahner, Ignacio Ellacuría, and Pope Francis J. Matthew Ashley

New in Paperback

This comprehensive study investigates the role that Ignatian spirituality has played in the renewal of academic theology using three prominent Jesuits as case studies.

Over several centuries, spirituality has come to define a field of concerns and themes increasingly treated separately from those of academic theology, as if the latter had little relation to the former. This raises the question for us today: How is spirituality related to the practice of theology? In Renewing Theology, J. Matthew Ashley provides an answer by turning to Ignatian spirituality and three prominent twentieth-century theologians who embraced its spiritual resources: Karl Rahner, Ignacio Ellacuría, and Jorge Mario Bergoglio—that is, Pope Francis.

Ashley begins his investigation by considering the historical origins of the widening separation between spirituality and academic theology in the Christian West. He provides an initial overview of Ignatian spirituality, focusing on the openness and multidimensionality of Ignatius of Loyola’s Spiritual Exercises, presented here as a text in which the conditions of modernity that defined its author’s world are present, at least incipiently. Ashley then offers three case studies in order to show how each Jesuit —Rahner, Ellacuría, and Pope Francis—responded to the challenges of modernity in a way that is uniquely nourished and illuminated by themes constitutive of Ignatian spirituality. Their theologies, Ashley suggests, evince a particular clarity and force when the Ignatian spirituality that animates them is foregrounded. Providing new and productive avenues into understanding the theologies of these three individuals, this sophisticated and enlightening book will interest scholars and students of systematic theology, as well as readers who are interested in the future of theology and spirituality in a fragmented age.

Contributor Bio

J.Matthew Ashley is professor of Christian Spirituality at the Jesuit School of Theology at Santa Clara University. He is the author and editor of a number of books, including Take Lord and Receive All My Memory: Toward an Anamnestic Mysticism

Quotes

“A splendid exhibition of the profound harmonies to be found between the needs of the modern world, the mission of theology and the spirituality of Ignatius.” —The Way

“A beautiful and inspiring argument about the importance of meeting God—a personal relationship. . . . This book will be very useful as a textbook and for scholarly researchers.” —Catholic Library World

9780268206451

Pub Date: 1/15/2025

$40.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

264 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Religion / Christian Theology

Pope Francis and Mercy

A Dynamic Theological Hermeneutic

New in Paperback

This theological study examines how Pope Francis lives out mercy in his own Petrine ministry and calls for it to be lived out by the people of God.

The centerpiece of Pope Francis’s pontificate from the very first days has been his proclamation of the importance of the mercy of God. While facing global problems of climate change, terror, political destabilization, refugees, and dire poverty, the Holy Father has articulated the mission of the Church through mercy, love, and forgiveness to reveal the compassion of God for all and particularly for those most vulnerable existing on the margins of society. In this compelling study, Gill Goulding, CJ, examines for the first time the critical and determinative role of mercy in Francis’s papacy using his homilies, allocutions, encyclicals, and addresses as primary sources. Goulding traces the theme of mercy in Francis’s thought, attending to its Ignatian foundations and its Christological, Trinitarian, and ecclesiological significance for the Church today, particularly the impact of his reappropriation and elevation of the discourse of mercy on the work of the Curia in Rome.

Goulding enters into dialogue with other theologians, including Romano Guardini, Walter Kasper, and Hans Urs von Balthasar, to demonstrate a continuity between Francis and his predecessors, especially Benedict XVI, in this area of mercy. In addition, Goulding argues that the influence of St. Ignatius Loyola, in particular his Spiritual Exercises, needs to be taken into account, paying special attention to Francis’s call for the practice of discernment. Throughout Pope Francis and Mercy, Goulding lays the groundwork for future research and suggests a wider appreciation of the necessary tools to enable an engagement with mercy in our contemporary world.

Contributor Bio

Gill K. Goulding, CJ, is professor of systematic theology at Regis College and author of A Church of Passion and Hope: The Formation of an Ecclesial Disposition from Ignatius Loyola to Pope Francis and the New Evangelization.

Quotes

“Goulding delivers a thorough, concisely-argued elucidation of the theological concept of mercy under Francis.” —Heythrop Journal

“[This book] challenges readers to conform to God’s merciful heart in order to discover life’s meaning and purpose and to embody the Trinitarian kenosis love. This transformative journey involves becoming faithful witnesses to God’s unchanging love and practicing merciful love in a world marked by increasing division along political, theological, and economic lines. Following Pope Francis’s example, embracing a merciful, loving life begins with discernment.” Homiletic & Pastoral Review

9780268106348

Pub Date: 1/15/2025

$45.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

466 Pages

9 in H | 6 in W

Religion / Christian Theology

Aquinas’s Eschatological Ethics and the Virtue of Temperance

Matthew Levering

New in Paperback

Matthew Levering offers a biblical and Thomistic portrait of the cardinal virtue of temperance and its allied virtues, in dialogue with an ecumenical range of theologians and scholars.

In Aquinas’s Eschatological Ethics and the Virtue of Temperance, Levering argues that Catholic ethics make sense only in light of the biblical worldview that Jesus has inaugurated the kingdom of God by pouring out his spirit. Jesus has made it possible for us to know and obey God’s law for human flourishing as individuals and communities. He has reoriented our lives toward the goal of beatific communion with him in charity, which affects the exercise of the moral virtues that pertain to human flourishing.

Without the context of the inaugurated kingdom, Catholic ethics as traditionally conceived will seem like an effort to find a middle ground between legalistic rigorism and relativistic laxism, which is especially the case with the virtue of temperance, the focus of Levering’s book. After an opening chapter on the eschatological/biblical character of Catholic ethics, the ensuing chapters engage Aquinas’s theology of temperance in the Summa theologiae, which identifies and examines a number of virtues associated with temperance. Levering demonstrates that the theology of temperance is profoundly biblical, and that Aquinas’s theology of temperance relies for its intelligibility upon Christ’s inauguration of the kingdom of God as the graced fulfillment of our created nature. The book develops new vistas for scholars and students interested in moral theology.

Contributor Bio

Matthew Levering is the James N. Jr. and Mary D. Perry Chair of Theology at Mundelein Seminary and co-director of the Chicago Theological Initiative. He is the author or editor of over fifty-five books, including Mary's Bodily Assumption.

Quotes

”Matthew Levering’s Aquinas's Eschatological Ethics and the Virtue of Temperance is an extraordinary contribution to Thomistic moral theology and will now serve as the ‘go to’ book on temperance. The book is utterly scholastic in its modeling of grace perfecting nature, since it explains temperance as accessible to unaided human reason but also shows how temperance in the life of discipleship to Christ is utterly transformed by God’s grace.” —William C. Mattison III, author of Growing in Virtue

“Matthew Levering’s study on temperance is an impressive tour through an enormous range of scholarship on the various aspects of this cardinal virtue and its relation to the biblical account of salvation history.” —Patrick Clark, author of Perfection in Death

9780268102142

Pub Date: 1/15/2025

$45.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

474 Pages

29 b&w illustrations

9 in H | 6 in W

Religion / Christianity

Quill and Cross in the Borderlands

Sor María de Ágreda and the Lady in Blue, 1628 to the Present Anna M. Nogar

New in Paperback

Quill and Cross in the Borderlands examines nearly four hundred years of history, folklore, literature, and art surrounding the legendary Lady in Blue and her historical counterpart, Sor María de Jesús de Ágreda.

This legendary figure, identified as seventeenth-century Spanish nun and writer Sor María de Jesús de Ágreda, miraculously appeared to tribes in colonial-era New Mexico and taught them the rudiments of the Catholic faith. Sor María, an author of mystical Marian texts, became renowned not only for her alleged spiritual travel from her cloister in Spain to New Mexico but also for her writing, studied and implemented by Franciscans and others around the world. Working from original historical accounts, archival research, and a wealth of literature on the legend and the historical figure alike, Anna M. Nogar meticulously examines how and why the person and the legend became intertwined in Catholic consciousness and social praxis.

Nogar addresses the influence of Sor María’s spiritual texts on many spheres of New Spanish and Spanish society over several centuries. Eventually, the historical Sor María and her writings virtually disappeared from view, and the Lady in Blue became a prominent folk figure in the present-day U.S. Southwest and U.S.-Mexico borderlands, appearing in folk stories, artwork, literature, theater, and public ritual that survives today. Quill and Cross in the Borderlands documents the material legacy of a legend that has survived and thrived for hundreds of years, and at the same time rediscovers the extraordinary impact of a hidden writer.

Contributor Bio

Anna M. Nogar is professor of Hispanic Southwest studies in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and Associate Dean of Humanities & Interdisciplinary Units at the University of New Mexico.

Quotes

“Anna M. Nogar’s contribution is necessary and just, in great part because nuns from both sides of the Atlantic are frequently decontextualized for the sake of exclusively theological, gender, or ideological interests.” —Latin American Literature Today

“Nogar weaves Sor María de Jesús de Ágreda’s roles as woman religious, author, mystic, and protomissionary into a vibrant historical trajectory that moves beyond fragmentary treatment of the nun as a predominantly folk figure.” Journal of Folklore Research

“Quill and Cross in the Borderlands will be an invaluable source for scholars of the American Southwest and Mexico alike. Nogar’s remarkable archival research coupled with copious transcriptions and translations of historical documents reveals how Sor María de Ágreda permeated New Spanish society.” —Aztlan

9780268205461

Pub Date: 2/15/2025

$45.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

356 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Political Science / Religion, Politics & State

Aristotle’s Discovery of the Human Piety

and Politics in the “Nicomachean Ethics”

New in Paperback

Aristotle’s Discovery of the Human offers a fresh, illuminating, and accessible analysis of one of the Western philosophical tradition’s most important texts.

In Aristotle’s Discovery of the Human, noted political theorist Mary P. Nichols explores the ways in which Aristotle brings the gods and the divine into his “philosophizing about human affairs” in his Nicomachean Ethics. Her analysis shows that, for Aristotle, both piety and politics are central to a flourishing human life. Aristotle argues that piety provides us not only an awareness of our kinship to the divine, and hence elevates human life, but also an awareness of a divinity that we cannot entirely assimilate or fathom. Piety therefore supports a politics that strives for excellence at the same time that it checks excess through a recognition of human limitation.

Proceeding through each of the ten books of the Ethics, Nichols shows that this prequel to Aristotle’s Politics is as theoretical as it is practical. Its goal of improving political life and educating citizens and statesmen is inseparable from its pursuit of the truth about human beings and their relation to the divine. In the final chapter, which turns to contemporary political debate, Nichols’s suggestion of the possibility of supplementing and deepening liberalism on Aristotelian grounds is supported by the account of human nature, virtue, friendship, and community developed throughout her study of the Ethics.

Contributor Bio

Mary P. Nichols is professor emerita in the Department of Political Science at Baylor University. She is the author of seven books, including Thucydides and the Pursuit of Freedom

Quotes

“Mary Nichols’s new book, Aristotle’s Discovery of the Human, despite chiefly being a reading of 2,500-year-old texts, could scarcely have come at a better time. In Nichols’s hands, these texts and their relevance to our times quickly become clear.” —The New Criterion

“[S]hould the reader of the Nicomachean Ethics not pay close attention to what the philosopher has to say about the divine? Yet few recent commentators have done so, until now. In this careful, richly textured commentary, Mary P. Nichols undertakes the Aristotelian task of correcting the balance.” —Interpretation

9780268200619

Pub Date: 2/15/2025

$35.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

238 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Religion / Religion, Politics & State

Faith, Nationalism, and the Future of Liberal Democracy

David M. Elcott, C. Colt Anderson, Tobias Cremer, Volker Haarmann

New in Paperback

Faith, Nationalism, and the Future of Liberal Democracy highlights the use of religious identity to fuel the rise of illiberal, nationalist, and populist democracy.

In Faith, Nationalism, and the Future of Liberal Democracy, David M. Elcott, C. Colt Anderson, Tobias Cremer, and Volker Haarmann present a pragmatic and modernist exploration of how religion engages in the public square. Elcott and his co-authors are concerned about the ways religious identity is being used to foster the exclusion of individuals and communities from citizenship, political representation, and a role in determining public policy. They examine the ways religious identity is weaponized to fuel populist revolts against a political, social, and economic order that values democracy in a global and strikingly diverse world. Included is a history and political analysis of religion, politics, and policies in Europe and the United States that foster this illiberal rebellion.

The authors explore what constitutes a constructive religious voice in the political arena, even in nurturing patriotism and democracy, and what undermines and threatens liberal democracies. To lay the groundwork for a religious response, the book offers chapters showing how Catholicism, Protestantism, and Judaism can nourish liberal democracy. The authors encourage people of faith to promote foundational support for the institutions and values of the democratic enterprise from within their own religious traditions and to stand against the hostility and cruelty that historically have resulted when religious zealotry and state power combine.

Faith, Nationalism, and the Future of Liberal Democracy is intended for readers who value democracy and are concerned about growing threats to it, and especially for people of faith and religious leaders, as well as for scholars of political science, religion, and democracy

Contributor

Bios

David M. Elcott is a professor at SUNY and the Hudson Link and works with Hudson Link for Higher Education in Prison to teach college level classes to incarcerated individuals at Green Haven Correctional Facility.

C.Colt Anderson is professor of Christian spirituality and the former dean of the Graduate School of Religion and Religious Education at Fordham University.

Tobias Cremer is a member of the European Parliament.

Volker Haarmann is the chair of the Department of Theology of the Protestant Church in the Rhineland.

Quotes

“In this trenchant analysis, Elcott . . . teams up with other researchers to explore the ways religion impacts politics in the U.S. and Europe. . . . This is a startling reminder of the insidious potential of religious identity being overtaken by extremist political forces.” —Publishers Weekly

“Elcott and his coauthors have come together across religious and cultural divides and exemplified a clear commitment to liberal democracy. Their work challenges faith leaders and laypersons alike to do the same and join together across seemingly insurmountable boundaries to work towards a global emphasis on human rights and dignity for all people.” —Reading Religion

9780268104306

Pub Date: 2/15/2025

$45.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

340 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Political Science / History & Theory

The Limits of Liberalism

Tradition, Individualism, and the Crisis of Freedom

New in Paperback

In The Limits of Liberalism, Mark T. Mitchell argues that a rejection of tradition is both philosophically incoherent and politically harmful.

The Limits of Liberalism identifies why most modern thinkers have denied the essential role of tradition and explains how tradition can be restored to its proper place. Mitchell demonstrates that the rejection of tradition as an epistemic necessity has produced a false conception of the human person—the liberal self—which in turn has produced a false conception of freedom. Together, these false conceptions have facilitated both liberal cosmopolitanism and identity politics.

Mitchell uses the philosophies of Michael Oakeshott, Alasdair MacIntyre, and Michael Polanyi to construct a compelling argument for a reconstructed view of tradition and, as a result, a reconstructed view of freedom. The Limits of Liberalism reveals that only by finding an alternative to the liberal self can we escape the incoherencies and pathologies inherent therein.

Contributor Bio

Mark T. Mitchell is the dean of academic affairs at Patrick Henry College and co-founder of Front Porch Republic. He is the author and co-editor of a number of books, including Plutocratic Socialism: The Future of Private Property and the Fate of the Middle Class.

Quotes

“In The Limits of Liberalism, Mitchell laments how liberalism facilitates the abandonment of place and tradition, in which the autonomous individual senses no obligation to her homeland or even her family, but rather is a citizen of the world committed to personal consumption and identity politics. . . . [Mitchell has] offered [a] forceful critique of liberalism.” —Law & Liberty

“Mitchell has written a deep and compelling account of the school of thought that defends tradition. It will long be a resource for conservatives and others who want to understand how tradition can represent an alternative to modern rationality that both recognizes objective truth and our personal rootedness, which paradoxically is what gives us the means to understand that truth.” —The American Conservative

9780268203979

Pub Date: 2/15/2025

$45.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

394 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Philosophy / Ethics & Moral Philosophy

Series: Catholic Ideas for a Secular World

The Collapse of Freedom of Expression

Reconstructing the Ancient Roots of Modern Liberty

New in Paperback

This book offers a holistic account of the problems posed by freedom of expression in our current times and offers corrective measures to allow for a more genuine exchange of ideas within the global society.

The topic of free speech is rarely addressed from a historical, philosophical, or theological perspective. In The Collapse of Freedom of Expression, Jordi Pujol explores both the modern concept of the freedom of expression based on the European Enlightenment and the deficiencies inherent in this framework. Modernity has disregarded the traditional roots of the freedom of expression drawn from Christianity, Greek philosophy, and Roman law, which has left the door open to the various forms of abuse, censorship, and restrictions seen in contemporary public discourse. Pujol proposes that we rebuild the foundations of the freedom of expression by returning to older traditions and incorporating both the field of pragmatics of language and theological and ethical concepts on human intentionality as new, complementary disciplines.

Pujol examines emblematic cases such as Charlie Hebdo, free speech on campus, and online content moderation to elaborate on the tensions that arise within the modern concept of freedom of expression. The book explores the main criticisms of the contemporary liberal tradition by communitarians, libertarians, feminists, and critical race theorists, and analyzes the gaps and contradictions within these traditions. Pujol ultimately offers a reconstruction project that involves bridging the chasm between the secular and the sacred and recognizing that religion is a font of meaning for millions of people, and as such has an inescapable place in the construction of a pluralist public sphere.

Contributor Bios

Jordi Pujol is an associate professor of media ethics and media law at the School of Church Communications in the Pontifical University of Santa Croce in Rome.

John Durham Peters is the Maria Rosa Menocal Professor of English and of Film and Media Studies at Yale University.

Quotes

“Freedom of speech is under siege today Unless we relearn its foundations, there is a serious risk that we will lose it. Jordi Pujol reminds us of these foundations and their crucial role in rehabilitating free speech in an age of official and unofficial censorship.” —Samuel Gregg, author of Reason, Faith, and the Struggle for Western Civilization

“Firmly rooted in venerable, even ancient, schools of philosophical and moral thought, The Collapse of Freedom of Expression looks to the future without nostalgia for what is irrevocably in the past. Jordi Pujol is fully open to the unprecedented newness of the historical and social context in which we find ourselves but remains confident that addressing these developments requires a renewal of foundational questions and principles. His book is well worth the attention of all of us who care about the past and the future of freedom of expression, and about the fundamental human goods that it aims to secure.” —Paolo Carozza, co-editor of The Practice of Human Development and Dignity

9780268203221

Pub Date: 1/15/2025

$45.00

Discount Code: x Paperback

372 Pages

61 b&w illustrations, 2 tables 9 in H | 6 in W

History / Latin America

German Conquistadors in Venezuela

The Welsers’ Colony, Racialized Capitalism, and Cultural Memory

Giovanna Montenegro

New

in Paperback

This fascinating study traces sixteenth-century German colonialism in Venezuela through the lens of racialized capitalism and the subsequent memorialization of the period through to the twentieth century.

Giovanna Montenegro investigates one of the strangest and often-ignored episodes in the conquest and colonization of the Americas the governance of the Province of Venezuela by the Welsers, a German banking family from Augsburg, in the sixteenth century. Using a comparative and interdisciplinary approach, the book chronicles the Welsers’ business expansion beyond banking to colonization and the slave trade in the Spanish Indies and the eventual failure of the colony. Montenegro follows the money that financed the Habsburg empire, tackling a multifaceted, multilingual corpus of primary documents. She examines numerous legal documents, from contracts granting colonization and slave trade rights (capitulaciones, asientos) to complex financial transactions (interests, exchange rates). She also analyzes maps, literary texts, and various chronicles and poems of the period. The book examines a history of violence perpetrated upon enslaved Indigenous and African people, but it is also the story of how different generations across the Atlantic, up to Nazi Germany in the twentieth century, have remembered and recalled this Welser period of governance in Venezuela to serve other social and political purposes. Montenegro positions her research in relation to current critical discussion on inequality, slavery, white supremacy, and neoconservative nationalist movements in contemporary Latin America and Germany

Contributor Bio

Giovanna Montenegro is an associate professor of comparative literature and director of the Latin American and Caribbean Area Studies program at Binghamton University.

Quotes

“A well-written, multidisciplinary addition to transatlantic history . . . asking not how the Welser experiment failed but how this failure shaped and reshaped cultural and national identities for centuries.” —Hispanic American Historical Review

“A fine portrayal of the Welser era in Venezuela and a convincing interpretation of its many uses in very different contexts.” —Colonial Latin American Review

9780933784482

Pub Date: 1/15/2025

$60.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

506 Pages 9 in H | 6 in W

Fiction / World Literature

Series: NCS Studies in the Age of Chaucer

Studies in the Age of Chaucer

Volume 46

Michelle Karnes (editor), Misty Schieberle (editor) Summary

Studies in the Age of Chaucer is the annual yearbook of the New Chaucer Society, publishing articles on the writing of Chaucer and his contemporaries, their antecedents and successors, and their intellectual and social contexts. More generally, articles explore the culture and writing of later medieval Britain (1200–1500). Each SAC volume also includes an annotated bibliography and reviews of Chaucer-related publications.

Contributor Bio

Michelle Karnes, associate professor of English at the University of Notre Dame, is the author of Imagination, Meditation, and Cognition in the Middle Ages.

Misty Schieberle is Associate Professor of English at the University of Kansas and the author of Feminized Counsel and the Literature of Advice in England, 1380–1500 (Brepols, 2014).

MEMBERSHIP:

Studies in the Age of Chaucer is sent annually to all paid members of the New Chaucer Society.

To join, please visit: https://newchaucersociety.org/account/join.

Or write to:

New Chaucer Society Department of English Saint Louis University 3800 Lindell Boulevard St Louis, MO 63104 USA

Telephone: (314) 520-7067 • Fax: (314) 977-1514

Email: chaucer@slu.edu

INSTITUTIONAL

SUBSCRIPTIONS

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For institutional subscription information to the Studies in the Age of Chaucer journal, please contact:

University of Notre Dame Press c/o Longleaf Services, Inc. 116 S Boundary Street Chapel Hill, NC 27514-3808

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All volumes in the collection of Studies in the Age of Chaucer are now back in print and available in WebPDF formats.

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Ara

The Life and Legacy of a Notre Dame Legend

Mark O. Hubbard, Rocky Bleier (foreword)

9780268208516

Pub Date: 8/1/2024

$35.00 USD 384 pages Hardcover

Prisms, Veils A Book of Fables

9780268208448

Pub Date: 7/1/2024

$25.00 USD 208 pages Paperback

Fighting Irish Football The Notre Dame Tradition in Photographs

Charles Lamb, Elizabeth Hogan

9780268208165

Pub Date: 8/1/2024

$55.00 USD 272 pages Hardcover

March 1917

The Red Wheel, Node III, Book 4

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Marian Schwartz (translator)

9780268208790

Pub Date: 10/1/2024

$39.00 USD 632 pages Hardcover

Ending Persecution Charting the Path to Global Religious Freedom

H. Knox Thames

9780268208677

Pub Date: 9/1/2024

$45.00 USD 416 pages Hardcover

Christian Apologetics and Philosophy An Introduction

Paul Herrick

9780268208936

Pub Date: 10/1/2024

$38.00 USD 254 pages Paperback

The New Nihilism The Existential Crisis of Our Time

Costantino Esposito

9780268207991

Pub Date: 11/1/2024

$38.00 USD 208 pages Hardcover

The Philosophy of Drama

Józef Tischner, Artur Rosman (translator), Cyril O'Regan (foreword)

9780268208837

Pub Date: 9/1/2024

$40.00 USD 262 pages Hardcover

The Ethics of Precision Medicine

The Problems of Prevention in Healthcare

Paul Scherz

9780268209056

Pub Date: 10/1/2024

$40.00 USD 210 pages Hardcover

A Theology of Health Wholeness and Human Flourishing

Tyler J. VanderWeele

9780268208332

Pub Date: 9/15/2024

$42.00 USD 392 pages Hardcover

Thinking the Unknowable The Essential Louis Dupré

Louis Dupré, Peter J. Casarella (editor)

9780268207953

Pub Date: 11/15/2024

$65.00 USD 208 pages Hardcover

Bioethics after God Morality, Culture, and Medicine

Mark J. Cherry

9780268208295

Pub Date: 8/15/2024

$55.00 USD 344 pages Hardcover

Burdened Agency

Christian Theology and End-of-Life Ethics

Travis Pickell

9780268208417

Pub Date: 8/15/2024

$50.00 USD 228 pages Hardcover

The Nature of Human Persons Metaphysics and Bioethics

New in Paperback

Jason T. Eberl

9780268107741

Pub Date: 7/15/2024

$45.00 USD 422 pages Paperback

Óscar Romero and Catholic Social Teaching

Todd Walatka (editor)

9780268208752

Pub Date: 10/15/2024

$65.00 USD 402 pages Hardcover

Sheets of Scattered Sand Cantonese Protestants and the Secular Dream of the Pacific Rim

Justin K.H. Tse

9780268208714

Pub Date: 11/15/2024

$75.00 USD 294 pages Hardcover

Montaigne Life without Law

New in Paperback

Pierre Manent, Paul Seaton (translator)

9780268107826

Pub Date: 7/15/2024

$35.00 USD 280 pages Paperback

The Saint’s Life and the Senses of Scripture Hagiography as Exegesis

Ann W. Astell

9780268208110

Pub Date: 7/15/2024

$70.00 USD 400 pages Hardcover

The Nature of Law Authority, Obligation, and the Common Good

Daniel Mark

9780268208219

Pub Date: 8/15/2024

$55.00 USD 404 pages Hardcover

Retrieving Freedom

The Christian Appropriation of Classical Tradition

New in Paperback

D. C. Schindler

9780268203719

Pub Date: 7/15/2024

$45.00 USD 550 pages Paperback

Theology of Horror

The Hidden Depths of Popular Films

Theology of Horror: The Hidden Depths of Popular Films

RyanG.Duns,SJ

Ryan G. Duns, SJ

9780268208554

9780268208554

PubDate: 10/15/2024

Pub Date: 10/15/2024

$45.00 USD 328 pages Hardcover

$45.00 USD 344 pages Hardcover

Religion, Modernity, and the Global Afterlives of Colonialism

Atalia Omer (editor), Joshua Lupo (editor)

9780268208486

Pub Date: 9/15/2024

$35.00 USD 238 pages Paperback

The Authoritarian Divide Populism, Propaganda, and Polarization

Orçun Selçuk

9780268208073

Pub Date: 7/15/2024

$60.00 USD 346 pages Hardcover

The Early Printed Illustrations of Dante’s “Commedia”

Matthew Collins

9780268208387

Pub Date: 12/15/2024

$65.00 USD 490 pages Paperback

9780268209865

Pub Date: 1/15/2025

$50.00

Discount Code: x Hardcover

336 Pages

8.5 in H | 5.5 in W

Biography & Autobiography / Memoir

Barrio Boy 40th Anniversary Edition

Ernesto Galarza, Ilan Stavans (introduction)

New in Hardcover

Journey with Ernesto Galarza through time, place, and culture in this stunning memoir of Mexican American identity and acculturation.

Barrio Boy is the remarkable story of one boy’s journey from a Mexican village so small its main street didn’t have a name, to the barrio of Sacramento, California, bustling and thriving in the early decades of the twentieth century. With vivid imagery and a rare gift for re-creating a child’s sense of time and place, Ernesto Galarza gives an account of the early experiences of his extraordinary life—from revolution in Mexico to segregation in the United States—that will continue to engage readers for generations to come.

Since it was first published in 1971, Galarza’s classic work has been assigned in high school and undergraduate classrooms across the country, profoundly affecting thousands of students who read this true story of acculturation into American life.

The 40th anniversary edition of this best-selling book includes a new text design and cover, as well an introduction by Ilan Stavans, the distinguished cultural critic and editor of the Norton Anthology of Latino Literature, which places Barrio Boy and Ernesto Galarza in historical context.

Contributor Bios

Born in Jalcocotán, Nayarit, Mexico, Ernesto Galarza (1905–1984) was a civil rights and labor activist, a scholar, and a pioneer during the decades when Mexican Americans had few public advocates. When he was eight, he migrated to Sacramento, California, where he worked as a farm laborer. One of Stanford’s first Chicano alumni, Galarza received an M.A. in 1929, and a Ph.D. in history from Columbia University in 1944. He returned to California where, during the 1950s, he joined the effort to create the first multiracial farm worker union, which set the foundation for the emergence of the United Farm Workers Union of the 1960s. His books most notably include the 1964 Merchants of Labor, on the exploitation of Mexican contract workers, and the 1971 Barrio Boy. In 1979, Dr. Galarza was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Ilan Stavans is an American writer and academic. He writes and speaks on American, Hispanic, and Jewish cultures. He is the author of Quixote (2015) and an editor and contributor to the Norton Anthology of Latino Literature (2010). He was the host of the syndicated PBS show Conversations with Ilan Stavans, which ran from 2001 to 2006.

Quotes

“In 1971, at the age of sixty-six, the labour activist, educator and scholar Ernesto Galarza (1905-1984) published Barrio Boy, a memoir of the long migration of his family from a small village in the Sierra Madre to California. Barrio Boy immediately became a classic of Chicano literature, and on its fortieth anniversary has now been published in a new edition with an introduction by the critic, biographer and short-story writer Ilan Stavans.”—TLS

“Galarza’s book is about growing up—first in Mexico, then in America. To this reader, it is on the same artistic level as Black Boy or Call It Sleep or even Huckleberry Finn. . . . As with Wright and Roth and Twain, we are given a near-perfect tale of rising from absolute poverty to middle-class security, but instead of a woeful recounting, it is filled with the joy of discovery: from living in the lively muddy streets of a small village in Nayarit to surviving, wide-eyed, in the lively and noisy barrios of Sacramento.”

RALPH: The Review of Arts, Literature, Philosophy and the Humanities

Books Published authors published from 10 Countries Translation Agreements 8 including Hungarian, Arabic, Portuguese, Korean, Russian, and Spanish

260 more thanincluding The New York Times, First Things, National Catholic Reporter, Foreign Affairs, Army Magazine, BookRiot, Ms. Magazine, and more. Major Conference Exhibits 19 Awards 16 Books Sold 63,085

Reviews or Features in Major Media Outlets

15 Student Interns & 13 Full-Time Staff

David Juarez, Assistant Production Editor

Emily King, Senior Acquisitions Editor

C. David Carlson, 5+1 Postdoctoral Fellow

Jennifer Bernal, Digital Assets Manager

Katie Campbell, Marketing and Sales Assistant

First-Time Authors 7

23 more than hosted

8 Publishing Workshops Campus Partnerships

press staff

Stephen M. Wrinn, Director

Matthew Dowd, Managing Editor

Megan Levine, Editorial Assistant and Assistant to the Director

Michelle Sybert, Assistant Director and Director of Marketing, Sales, and Development

Paul Ashenfelter, Business Manager

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Rachel Kindler, Associate Acquisitions Editor

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Wendy McMillen, Production and Design Manager

2023 – 2024 at a glance

awards and honors

catholic media association book awards, 2024

Second Place, Pope Francis

Goulding, Pope Francis and Mercy

Second Place, English Translation

Garrigues, God Without the Idea of Evil

Second Place, Popular Presentation of the Catholic Faith

Halik, Touch the Wounds

Second Place, Ecumenism & Interfaith Relations

Chryssavgis, Global Initiatives of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew

Third Place, First Time Author of Theological Subject Matters

Warne, Josef Pieper on the Spiritual Life

Honorable Mention, First Time Author of Theological Subject Matters

Lett, Hans Urs von Balthasar’s Theology of Representation

aldo and jeanne scaglione

publication award for a manuscript in italian literary studies, Awarded by the Modern Language Association

Petrarch, Petrarch’s Penitential Psalms and Prayers

foreword indies book of the year awards, 2023

Silver Medal, Religion

Halik, Touch the Wounds

Finalist, Art

Roche, Beautiful Ugliness

Finalist, History

Matthews, Generals and Admirals, Criminals and Crooks

Finalist, Multicultural

Heck, Political Theology and Islam

Finalist, War & Military

Parker, American Presidents in Diplomacy and War

juan felipe herrera best poetry book award, Awarded by the International Latino Book Awards

Gold Medal

Luna, Magnificent Errors

Bronze Medal

Holnes, Stepmotherland

john gilmary shea prize, Awarded by the American Catholic Historical Association

Dewulf, Afro-Atlantic Catholics

selected campus partnerships

Alliance for Catholic Education

College of Arts and Letters

Contending Modernities

Creative Writing Program

Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism

de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture

Department of History

The Graduate School

Devers Program in Dante Studies, Center for Italian Studies

Hesburgh Libraries

Institute for Advanced Study

Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts

KelloggInstituteforInternational Studies

KennanInstituteoftheWoodrow

Wilson International Center for Scholars

Keough-NaughtonInstitutefor IrishStudies

Keough School of Global Affairs

Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies

Liu Institute for Asia and Asian Studies

Letras Latinas, Institute for Latino Studies

McGrath Institute for Church Life, Church Life Journal

Medieval Institute

Meruelo Family Center for Career Development, Graduate Career Services

Raclin Murphy Museum of Art

An Analogy of Grace

Aquinas’s Eschatological Ethics and the Virtue of Temperance

Aristotle’s Discovery of the Human

Barrio Boy

Challenging Modern Atheism and Indifference

The Collapse of Freedom of Expression

The Collapse of Venezuela

The

Faith of the Fathers

Faith, Nationalism, and the Future of Liberal Democracy

German Conquistadors in Venezuela

The Glacier Priest

The Invisibility of Religion in Contemporary Art

Liberal Education and Democracy

The Limits of Liberalism

Opportunities for Learning

Pope Francis and Mercy

The Price of the Common Good

Quill and Cross in the Borderlands

Renewing Theology

Shari`a, Citizenship, and Identity in Aceh

Studies in the Age of Chaucer

Touch the Wounds

Translingual Catholics

We Have Ceased to See the Purpose

Women in the Orthodox Tradition

Marzi Afriko

C.Colt Anderson

Jonathan A. Anderson

J.Matthew Ashley

Mark Berends

Travis Curtright

Tobias Cremer

David M. Elcott

Ernesto Galarza

Gill K. Goulding, CJ

Volker Haarmann

Tomáš Halík

Maureen T. Hallinan

Mark Hoipkemier

Moch. Nur Ichwan

Michelle Karnes

Matthew Levering

Jin Lu

Pierre Manent

Josh McMullen

Robert J. Miller

Elizabeth Covay Minor

Mark T. Mitchell

Giovanna Montenegro

Melissa Moschella

Mary P. Nichols

Anna M. Nogar

Jordi Pujol

Ashley Marie Purpura

Francisco Rodríguez

Arskal Salim

Barbara Schneider

Misty Schieberle

Henry Shea, S.J. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

Ignat Solzhenitsyn

Eka Srimulyani

Bob Pepperman Taylor

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