The Ironist

Differing Perspectives

The Irony Club

The Irony Club

Can't get enough of irony, can we? So, we created a club. Welcome one and all! We would like to thank you for subscribing to The Ironist and for your kind encouragement over the past two years. It has meant more to us than we can easily say. As a result, we have some...

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Say Not, “the Struggle Nought Availeth.”

Say Not, “the Struggle Nought Availeth.”

The new year is here... As the year turns, I find myself thinking about what we carry forward and what truly matters. The grand sweep of The Lord of the Rings enthralled me in high school. I had read it two or three times by the time I reached university. It was the...

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The Angel of the Archive: The Marginalia of God

The Angel of the Archive: The Marginalia of God

Jonathan writes about a mythic book with marginalia that might reveal more than any book today. What kind of an Ironist are You? Take the quiz and find out. It is well known—at least among those who subscribe to obscure theological journals—that Anselmo of Bruges held...

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The Angel of the Archive: A Lost Medieval Legend

The Angel of the Archive: A Lost Medieval Legend

Jonathan revives the myth of an angel who collects the edges of the written world. What kind of an Ironist are You? Take the quiz and find out. Among the minor curiosities of the early Rhineland monastic tradition there exists a nearly forgotten medieval legend,...

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Folk Wisdom – Part 2 of 2

Folk Wisdom – Part 2 of 2

In this piece, Peter talks about the enduring power of inherited wisdom and how neglecting it leaves us unmoored. In a speech delivered in 1858, Abraham Lincoln foresaw the consequences of the ruinous Civil War that was to devastate his nation: “A house divided...

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Folk Wisdom – Part 1 of 2

Folk Wisdom – Part 1 of 2

In this piece, Peter talks about how Hagar’s pride blinds her to the shared moral wisdom all humans depend on. In Margaret Laurence’s novel The Stone Angel, the combative central character Hagar Shipley (nee Currie) tells the story of her own life. The reader must be...

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Dinner Is Served: Stalin, Dominating at the Table

Dinner Is Served: Stalin, Dominating at the Table

Continuing his reflections on the great meals of history and literature, Jonathan Bennett recalls a feast where appetite became an instrument of power. Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin enjoyed his food. By the time of his death in 1953 he had grown stout enough that the...

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