St. Austin Review

The St. Austin Review (StAR) is a Catholic international review of culture and ideas. It is edited by author, columnist and EWTN TV host Joseph Pearce and literary scholar Robert Asch. StAR includes book reviews, discussions on Christian art, contemporary Christian poetry, and erudite essays on all aspects of both past and present literature and culture from a traditionalist Catholic perspective. The magazine is based in South Bend, Indiana.

St Austin Review
DisciplineCulture
LanguageEnglish
Edited byJoseph Pearce and Robert Asch
Publication details
History2001
Publisher
St Augustine's Press (United States)
FrequencyBimonthly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4St Austin Rev.
Indexing
ISSN2334-5934
Links

Originally launched to be the flagship publication of the Saint Austin Press in 2001, it is now published by St. Augustine's Press.[1] It is distributed by St. Augustine's in North America, and was distributed in Europe by Family Publications until they ceased trading. The journal is multinational in content, containing material from North America, Europe, and Australasia, although the review tends to lean towards material from the United States.

In addition to the editors, regular contributors have included G.K. Chesterton scholar Dale Ahlquist,[2] Ordinariate priest and Catholic apologist Fr. Dwight Longenecker,[3][4] former C.S. Lewis protégé Fr. Peter Milward, Fr. James V. Schall, musicologist Susan Treacy,[5][6] Chavagnes International College founder Ferdi McDermott, editor-in-chief of Baronius Press Dr. John Newton, Dr. Patrick Riley, and artist and essayist Jef Murray.

Poets and writers whose work has appeared in StAR include Dana Gioia,[7] Maryann Corbett,[8] Ralph McInerny, Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, Aidan Nichols, Fr. Benedict Groeschel, Alice von Hildebrand, scholar of Scottish Gaelic literature Ronald Black,[9] Brendan D. King,[10][11] and Peter Kreeft. Frequently, theme issues of StAR focus on the role played by Catholicism in the arts, the literature, the history, and the culture of Great Britain, the United States, and many other nations. Occasionally, StAR has also introduced it's readers to literary figures of the past who were not previously well known among Conservative and Traditionalist Catholics.

For example, Jackson T. Hern alleged in a 2022 StAR article that the 10th-century German nun Hrotsvitha of Gandersheim Abbey, a Medieval Latin playwright better known among Radical feminists, successfully Christianized the theatre of Ancient Rome.[12]

There has also been, however, almost as much focus upon the writings and literary legacy of non-Catholic poets and writers, such as Vladimir Soloviev, Fyodor Dostoevsky, C.S. Lewis, John Milton, John Donne, Richard Wilbur,[13] Jane Austen, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, and T.S. Eliot.

In a 2022 interview with StAR co-editor Joseph Pearce, Polish journalist Anna Szyda from the literary magazine Magna Polonia explained that the nihilism of modern American poetry is widely noticed and commented upon in the Third Polish Republic as reflecting, "the deleterious influence of the contemporary civilisation on the American soul." In response, StAR co-editor Joseph Pearce described "the neo-formalist revival" inspired by the late Richard Wilbur and how it has been reflected in recent verse by the Catholic poets whom he and Robert Asch publish in StAR. Pearce said that the Catholic faith and optimism of the younger generation of Catholic poets made him feel hope for the future.[14]

References

  1. "About". Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  2. Dale Ahlquist, Finding the Faith in the Frozen North: Fr. Stanley Jaki on Sigrid Undset, St Austin Review, November/December 2021, The Nordic Muse: Celebrating Sigrid Undset, pages 17-19.
  3. Fr. Dwight Longenecker, Quickened to Full Life by War: Tolkien's Redemption of the Trenches, St Austin Review, March/April 2014, World War One: Hell, Heroism, and Holiness, pages 29-30.
  4. Fr. Dwight Longenecker, The Inklings' Northerness, St Austin Review, November/December 2021, The Nordic Muse: Celebrating Sigrid Undset, page 33.
  5. Susan Treacy, Michael Kurek and the Sound of Beauty, St Austin Review, March/April 2020, American Literature in the Twentieth Century, pages 25-27.
  6. Susan Treacy, The Musical Landscape of Kristin Lavransdatter, St Austin Review, November/December 2021, The Nordic Muse: Celebrating Sigrid Undset, pages 31-32.
  7. Dana Gioia, John Allan Wyeth: Soldier Poet, St Austin Review, March/April 2020, American Literature in the Twentieth Century, pages 4-7.
  8. Translated by Maryann Corbett, The Women Go to the Tomb: Lines 1-23 of The Descent into Hell from the Old English of the Exeter Book, St Austin Review, July/August 2022, Women and the Word: The Feminine Voice in Christian Culture, page 2.
  9. Fr. Allan MacDonald, translated by Ronald Black, A Christmas Hymn: May the Trinity be Praised, St Austin Review (December 2001), page 2.
  10. Reviewed by Brendan D. King, Out of the Fire of Hell: Welsh Experience of the Great War 1914-1918 in Prose and Verse, by Alan Llwyd, St Austin Review, March/April 2014, World War One: Hell, Heroism, and Holiness, pages 37-38.
  11. Brendan D. King, The Poet and the Counterrevolution: Richard Wilbur, the Free Verse Revolution, and the Revival of Rhymed Poetry, St Austin Review, March/April 2020, American Literature in the Twentieth Century, pages 15-19.
  12. Jackson T. Hern, A Mighty Voice for Virtue: Hrosvitha's 'Paphnutius' and the Baptism of Classical Drama, St Austin Review July/August 2022, Women and the Word: The Feminine Voice in Christian Culture, pages 7-9.
  13. Brendan D. King, St. Austin Review, The Poet and the Counterrevolution: Richard Wilbur, the Free Verse Revolution, and the Revival of Rhymed Poetry, March/April 2020, American Literature in the Twentieth Century, pages 15-19.
  14. Poetry and Modern Culture: An Interview With Joseph Pearce by Anna Szyda. May 17th, 2022.
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