CRC Events
Upcoming Events
New York Unbound: Chronicles of Change and Resilience
Empire State Editions Author Panel
Continuing the dialogue sparked by University Press Week (November 11-15, 2024), join us for this Fall evening event featuring authors from Fordham University Press’s Empire State Editions imprint. This panel will explore significant moments in New York City's rich history and its ongoing transformation through the voices of these engaging authors.
Moderator:
David J. Goodwin, Assistant Director of the Center on Religion and Culture at Fordham University, and author of Midnight Rambles: H. P. Lovecraft in Gotham (November 2023) and Left Bank of the Hudson: Jersey City and the Artists of 111 1st Street (October 2017)
Speakers:
Jonathan Butler, author of Join the Conspiracy: How a Brooklyn Eccentric Got Lost on the Right, Infiltrated the Left, and Brought Down the Biggest Bombing Network in New York (September 2024)
Alice Sparberg Alexiou, author of Devil's Mile: The Rich, Gritty History of the Bowery (July 2024)
Nicole Gelinas, author of Movement: New York's Long War to Take Back Its Streets from the Car (November 2024)
Jennifer Baum, author of Just City: Growing Up on the Upper West Side When Housing Was a Human Right (April 2024)
Co-hosted by
Robert Putnam on America’s Social Crisis
The 2025 Russo Lecture
The renowned author of Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community, and the subject of a new documentary, Join or Die, discusses his latest book, The Upswing: How America Came Together a Century Ago and How We Can Do It Again.
Select Past Events
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Dorothy Fortenberry and the Art of Screenwriting
October 29, 2024 | 6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.Fordham University | Lincoln Center CampusLeon Lowenstein Center | 12th Floor Lounge113 West 60th Street | New York, NY 10023
The Emmy-nominated producer/screenwriter of Hulu’s The Handmaid’s Tale and Apple TV’s Extrapolations will talk about what it takes to make great television about important issues—and how her Catholic faith and her passion for combating climate change inform her career and her craft.
Dorothy Fortenberry will draw on an assortment of clips from shows she has written and produced to explain her approach and prompt questions from the audience.
CRC director David Gibson will moderate the conversation.
Dorothy Fortenberry is a playwright, screenwriter, and essayist. She is the 2021 laureate of America Media’s George W. Hunt, S.J., Prize for Excellence in Journalism, Arts & Letters for outstanding work in the category of fiction writer or dramatist. A television writer and producer, she has worked on Extrapolations for Apple TV, The 100 for the CW Network, and The Handmaid’s Tale on Hulu. Fortenberry’s essays have appeared in Commonweal Magazine and the Los Angeles Review of Books. She has won the Producers Guild of America award and two Writers Guild of America awards.
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Andrea Tornielli on Jesus and the Pope
Vatican media’s editorial director discusses his novelistic new book, "The Life of Jesus,” written in conversation with Pope Francis
Tuesday, October 8, 2023 | 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.America Media | 1212 Avenue of the Americas | 11th FloorNew York, NY 10036
Andrea Tornielli is an Italian journalist and longtime vaticanista who now oversees the various Vatican media outlets. Tornielli’s latest book, The Life of Jesus, is a reimagining of the life of Jesus that, like the TV series The Chosen, helps readers approach the story of Jesus with fresh eyes and an open heart.
The book features a foreword by Pope Francis and is interwoven with commentary by the pontiff.
Archbishop Gabriele Caccia, the Holy See’s permanent observer at the United Nations, will introduce Tornielli. Tornielli will give a brief presentation on the book, and then the CRC’s David Gibson will moderate a conversation with him and award-winning novelist Colum McCann about the writing process, faith and art, and the Vatican under Pope Francis.
The event will begin with a wine and cheese reception at 5:30 p.m., and the book discussion will begin at 6:15 p.m. After the event, Tornielli will sign books, which will be available for sale. Copies of The Life of Jesus can be purchased in advance as well.
This event was co-sponsored byFordham’s Center on Religion and Culture, America Media, and the Saint Pio Foundation -
Sacred Landscapes:
Memorialization in New York City Public Parks
Thursday, May 23, 2024 | 6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.South Lounge | Lowenstein BuildingFordham University at Lincoln Center113 West 60th Street | New York, NY 10023A Duffy Fellows Program Event
Public parks are the theater of New York City civic life, serving as spaces of recreation, rest, learning, and protest. They host the diverse, occasionally conflicting desires of the living, while simultaneously exhibiting a record of our shared public history. 2023-2024 Duffy Fellow Amelia Medved’s research concerns the contemporary use of park memorial spaces in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Manhattan, specifically those which are consecrated burial sites.
In her original print publication, A Breathing Place: Consecrated Memorial Sites in New York City Public Parks, Medved explores what it means to designate public space as sacred at four case study sites: the Prison Ship Martyrs Memorial in Fort Greene Park; the Enslaved African burial ground in Van Cortlandt Park; the public cemetery on Hart Island; and the National September 11 Memorial at the World Trade Center.
The Fordham Center on Religion and Culture invites you to attend the launch event for A Breathing Place, which will be accompanied by a presentation of Medved’s research and a light reception.
Amelia Medved (FCRH ‘23) majored in Environmental Studies and Visual Arts. She currently works as a Studio Assistant at SCAPE, a New York City-based landscape architecture firm. Medved is passionate about environmental justice, specifically with a focus on parks equity and community-based ecological stewardship.
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Ethan Hawke on Wildcat:
Screening and Conversation
Friday, May 3, 2024 | 5:00 p.m.1998 Broadway at West 68th StreetNew York, NY 10023
Ethan Hawke directs his daughter, the actress Maya Hawke, in Wildcat, a biographical drama that he co-wrote about the Catholic author Flannery O’Connor. Hawke joins us after the screening for a conversation on O’Connor, the Catholic imagination, and making great movies about life’s big questions.
Fordham’s resident Flannery O’Connor expert, Angela Alaimo O’Donnell, associate director of the Curran Center for American Catholic Studies, joins Fordham CRC director David Gibson in a conversation that will include questions from the audience.
Organized by Fordham’s Center on Religion and Culture and the Curran Center for American Catholic Studies. -
Every Creeping Thing
A Conversation with Graphic Novelist Madison Morris
Wednesday, May 1, 2024 | 6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.South Lounge | Lowenstein BuildingFordham University at Lincoln Center113 West 60th Street | New York, NY 10023A Duffy Fellows Program Event
Join us for a conversation around the new graphic novel Every Creeping Thing. Author Madison Morris (FCRH ‘24) will give a brief presentation on the spiritual inspiration and ideas behind the story as well as the process of working on a long-form creative work as a Duffy Fellow. The talk will be followed by a Q&A and a light reception hosted by Fordham’s Center on Religion and Culture.
Every Creeping Thing is the story of a petulant girl and the transformations she and her family undergo in the wake of the 1950 polio epidemic. On the highway between suburbia and the state hospital, the family’s car gets a flat and they find themselves stranded. Carole and her brother wander into the timberlands alongside the highway where they encounter the uncanny: a world run by human-natured insects. Every Creeping Thing plays in the space between death and heaven, fusing the natural with the unnatural to explore the experience of being a finite piece of an infinite creation.
Madison Morris (FCRH ‘24) is majoring in Theology and English with a concentration in Creative Writing. In her creative work, she strives to create stories and images that allow readers to stay in a question instead of rushing toward an answer.
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Discerning the Call:
Change in the American Priesthood
Thursday, April 25, 2024 | 6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.144 West 65th Street | Between Broadway and AmsterdamNew York, NY 10023A Duffy Fellows Program Event
When a man discovers a call to the priesthood today, his process of discernment looks much different than it would have decades ago. In the past, men entered seminary younger, the application process was quicker, and their friends and family usually celebrated the decision. Today, the norm is much different. But why?
In this original documentary, 2023-2024 Duffy Fellows Jay Doherty and Patrick Cullinan examine the cultural changes that have affected the American Catholic priesthood in the last seventy-five years. From the social and political upheaval of the 1960s, to the clerical sex abuse crisis of the early 2000s, to the modern embrace of secularism, Discerning the Call: Change in the American Priesthood explores the many elements which have changed priestly discernment in the United States.
Featuring interviews with Cardinal Timothy Dolan, archbishop of New York, and Jesuit author Fr. James Martin, SJ, plus men ordained from the 1950s to the present day.
Patrick Cullinan (FCRH ‘24) is in the Honors Program, majoring in Latin and minoring in Economics. He is deeply interested in Catholicism and its interaction with American culture, having rediscovered the faith during his time at Fordham.
Jay Doherty (FCRH ‘26) is a sophomore studying Digital Technologies & Emerging Media and Philosophy. He is a reporter for WFUV, the university's NPR radio station, and he serves as a University Ambassador in the Rose Hill Society. Doherty is also the treasurer of Fordham's Jesuit Network and the student representative of the University’s Alumni Association.
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El Niño at the Met:
Opera, Baby Jesus, and Today’s Refugees
The critically-acclaimed opera premiers at the Met, and director Lileana Blain-Cruz joins us for an evening of conversation on art, faith, and justice
Friday, April 19, 2024 | 6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.Church of St. Paul the Apostle | Columbus Avenue & West 60th StreetNew York, NY 10023
Special appearance by Daniela Mack, the mezzo-soprano who will perform a selection from El Niño
A Christmas story at Easter time? That’s essentially what the Metropolitan Opera is doing in presenting the company premier of John Adams’s El Niño. But the opera-oratorio’s focus on the experience of the refugee and the migrant—how they struggled to find acceptance in Biblical times—could not be more contemporary, and urgent.
The composition incorporates sacred and secular texts in English, Spanish, and Latin, from biblical times to the present day, in an extraordinarily dramatic retelling of the Nativity.
The vivid new production also marks the Met debut of celebrated theater maker Lileana Blain-Cruz, resident director at Lincoln Center Theater, who joins us to talk about the opera and the importance of staging art that matters for our world today. She will be joined by Fadi Skeiker of Fordham’s theater department and Fordham theology professor Leo Guardado.
David Gibson, director of the Center on Religion and Culture, will moderate the discussion with the panelists and the audience.
This event was a partnership between Fordham University, the Metropolitan Opera, and Church of St. Paul the Apostle
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Yield Not: Hope and Communion in the Bronx’s Toughest Years
A talk by journalist Eileen Markey
Tuesday, April 16, 2024 | 6:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.Butler Commons | Duane LibraryFordham University at Rose Hill441 East Fordham Road | Bronx, NY 10458
In the darkest days of the New York City fiscal crisis and its aftermath in the 1970s, as faith in cities faltered, Bronx activists argued for the worth of urban neighborhoods and the value of people living in them. In a time of disinvestment, arson, and abandonment, it was community organizing—often marshaled through Catholic parishes and drawing on religious narratives—that demonstrated an alternate vision for the future of the city: rebuilding neighborhoods that had been written off as beyond redemption.
In this lecture and discussion, Eileen Markey, Writer in Residence at the Center on Religion and Culture, will draw on research for her forthcoming book about the Bronx people’s movement of the 1970s and 1980s.
Eileen Markey is an assistant professor of Journalism at Lehman College of the City University of New York and a Visiting Scholar at the Bronx County Historical Society. She has reported on urban policy and social movements for more than two decades.
This event was co-sponsored by the Bronx County Historical Society as part of its Annual Spring Lecture Series in Bronx History.Image credit: Mel Rosenthal
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A Conversation with John Patrick Shanley
Friday, April 5, 2024 | 6:00 - 7:00 p.m.McMahon 109 | Fordham University at Lincoln Center155 West 60th Street | Entrance between Columbus and AmsterdamNew York, NY 10023
The Tony-winning playwright and renowned screenwriter John Patrick Shanley visits Fordham to talk about the hit Broadway revival of his play Doubt and a career that runs from an Oscar for Moonstruck to his newest play, Brooklyn Laundry. Plus much more. The Center on Religion and Culture’s director, David Gibson, will moderate a conversation with the audience.
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Shelter in Solitude
Screening and Talkback with Actor-Screenwriter Siobhan Fallon Hogan
Wednesday, April 3, 2024 | 6:00 p.m.Howard Gilman Theater144 West 65th Street | Between Broadway and AmsterdamNew York, NY 10023Siobhan Fallon Hogan (Saturday Night Live, Seinfeld, Men in Black) is a longtime comedian, actor, and writer for film and stage—and a Catholic mom. She draws on all those vocations for her latest feature film, Shelter in Solitude. It’s a heartfelt and heart-breaking story of a down-on-her-luck bar owner in upstate New York who finds work as a guard on death row—and her unlikely friendship with a prisoner scheduled to be executed.
“Fallon is known for her witty sarcasm and humor but has taken on a more serious role in this film.” – People magazine
“These are the kind of movies we need to go see.” – Seth Myers, “The Seth Myers Show”
“She has terrific comedic timing and also excels during the film's poignant scenes.” – NYC Movie Guru
Siobhan Fallon Hogan joins us after the screening for a conversation on making movies, making people laugh, and making it in Hollywood as a woman—and a person of faith.
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A Catholic Reckoning on Slavery
Rachel Swarns on her book The 272: The Families Who Were Enslaved and Sold to Build the American Catholic Church
The 2024 Russo Lecture
Thursday, February 29, 2024 | 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.McNally Amphitheater | Fordham University at Lincoln Center140 W. 62nd Street | New York, NY 10023
Rachel Swarns is a journalist, scholar, and Black Catholic from Staten Island whose groundbreaking reporting and research illuminates the harrowing origin story of the Catholic Church in America, which relied on slave labor and slave sales to sustain its operations and to help fuel its expansion.
The article she first wrote for The New York Times in 2016—about the prominent Jesuit priests who sold 272 people to save Georgetown University from bankruptcy—would become the seed of her new book, The 272: The Families Who Were Enslaved and Sold to Build the American Catholic Church. Her work has helped spark the movement for reparations and reconciliation in America, and in the Catholic Church.
Professor Swarns will talk about her book, about what the Church—and the United States—must do to help heal our racial divides, and about what this project has meant for her own faith.
David Gibson, director of Fordham’s Center on Religion and Culture, will moderate a discussion after the talk, including questions from the audience.
This lecture is made possible by the Russo Family Foundation in memory of Wanda and Robert Russo, Sr., M.D., FCRH ‘39
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Catholicism as Cultural History
The Enduring Legacy of John O’Malley, S.J.
A Fordham University Symposium
Saturday, February 3, 2024 | 2:00 - 6:30 p.m.12th Floor Lounge | Lowenstein BuildingFordham University | 113 West 60th Street | New York, NY 10023John O’Malley, SJ (1927-2022) was an extraordinarily talented and devoted scholar, writer, teacher, and Jesuit priest. The research of his early career helped re-cast our understanding of the Catholic response to the Reformation and the development of the Society of Jesus. The writings of the last twenty years of his long and prolific life—books and essays on church councils and Western cultures—brought him new audiences beyond the academy.
The golden thread running through all of his work was the centrality of cultural history. This conference will highlight that legacy while expanding on the ways that O’Malley’s style can help us understand a more global and diverse Catholicism of the future.
Anchored by a keynote address by Carlos Eire of Yale University, this afternoon conference will feature panels on “Catholicism as Cultural History” and “Languages of Dialogue and Inclusion,” and will include contributions from scholars Pamela Jones, Mary Dunn, Thomas Worcester, SJ, Mary Ann Hinsdale, Catherine Chaput, and James McCartin.
Brenna Moore of Fordham will offer concluding remarks, to be followed by a wine-and-cheese reception.
Program Schedule
2:00 - 2:10 p.m.
Welcome and Introduction
David Gibson, Director of Fordham University’s Center on Religion and Culture2:10 - 3:00 p.m.
Keynote: “Catholicism and All That: John O'Malley, Consummate Historian”
Carlos Eire, Yale University3:00 - 3:15 p.m.
Coffee break3:15 - 4:30 p.m.
Panel One: Catholicism as Cultural History
Panel chair: James McCartin, Fordham University"John O'Malley's Legacy in the Field of Art History"
Pamela Jones, UMass Boston"Somewhere between Sacraments and Sensuality: John O'Malley and the Art of
Translating the Catholic Past"
Mary Dunn, St. Louis University"Jesuit History as Cultural History"
Thomas Worcester, S.J., Fordham University4:30 - 5:45 p.m.
Panel Two: Languages of Dialogue and Inclusion
Panel chair: James McCartin, Fordham University"John O'Malley and the Next-Gen"
Mary Ann Hinsdale, I.H.M., Boston College"John O’Malley, the Four Cultures of Rhetoric, and the Contemporary Predicament”
Catherine Chaput, Fordham University5:45 - 6:15 p.m.
Concluding Reflections
Brenna Moore, Fordham University6:15 - 7:00 p.m.
ReceptionThis event is organized by the Center on Religion and Culture and is also made possible through the support of the Spellman Jesuit Community of Fordham, the Fordham Division on Mission and Ministry, and the Fordham History Department.
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Loving Strangers
How would such a moral code reshape our lives?
Notre Dame philosopher Meghan Sullivan on our societal crisis
November 7, 2023 | 5:15 p.m. - 6:45 p.m. | Walsh Library, Flom Auditorium | Fordham University at Rose Hill
The Daniel J. Sullivan Memorial Lecture in Philosophy
Social isolation and animosity are arguably the central challenges of our angry age. Can philosophy play a role in overcoming the affective, social, and political alienation that mark our communities today?
Notre Dame philosopher Meghan Sullivan focuses her work on the ways philosophy contributes to the good life and she is currently writing a book on the role love plays in grounding moral, political, and religious reasoning. It is tentatively titled Samaritanism: Moral Responsibility and Our Inner Lives. In this lecture, she will expound on the central themes of this forthcoming book.
Meghan Sullivan is the Wilsey Family College Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. She is a popular writer and speaker and founded Notre Dame’s God and the Good Life Program, which introduces undergraduates to essential philosophical questions concerning happiness, morality and meaning, and key methods for wrestling with them.
David Gibson, director of Fordham’s Center on Religion and Culture, will moderate a discussion after the talk, including questions from the audience.
The Daniel J. Sullivan Memorial Lecture is co-sponsored by Fordham’s Department of Philosophy and the Center on Religion and Culture.
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Dracula: Medieval Hero and Modern Vampire
October 26, 2023 | 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.
McNally Amphitheater | Fordham University at Lincoln Center 140 W. 62nd Street | New York, NY 10023
Dracula—the vampire count—has been a popular cultural mainstay portrayed in films, television shows, novels, and comic books for over a century. The modern fascination with Dracula began in the 1920s and 1930s with the success of plays and movies based on Bram Stoker’s eponymous novel, first published in 1897.
The events described in Stoker’s Dracula take place in fin-de-siècle London and Transylvania, and the novel makes only loose historical references to its fifteenth-century namesake: Vlad III "the Impaler" (1431–c. 1476), prince of Wallachia, now a region of Romania. The massive popularity of the fictional Dracula has generated considerable curiosity about the real-life prince himself, his brutal reign, and his times.
In this lecture, Dr. Alice Isabella Sullivan will examine the transformations of the historical figure into a modern vampire and the tireless allure of Dracula for creators and audiences.
Panelists:
Alice Isabella Sullivan, is an Assistant Professor of Medieval Art and Architecture and the Director of Graduate Studies at Tufts University, specializing in Eastern European and Byzantine-Slavic art history. She is the author of the recently published book, The Eclectic Visual Culture of Medieval Moldavia.
David J. Goodwin, is the Assistant Director of Fordham’s Center on Religion and Culture and the author of the forthcoming Midnight Rambles: H. P. Lovecraft in Gotham, will moderate a conversation with the audience.