132 Episodes

  1. Alison Shell: Staging Magic in Catholic Drama

    Published: 12/06/2019
  2. John McGreevy: Jacques Maritain and Democracy

    Published: 13/05/2019
  3. Vincent Lloyd: Black Dignity

    Published: 13/05/2019
  4. Daniel Mulhall: James Joyce and Irish Catholicism

    Published: 24/04/2019
  5. Melanie McDonagh: Catholicism and Journalism

    Published: 24/04/2019
  6. Anna Lawson: The Work of Fenwick Lawson

    Published: 24/04/2019
  7. Eamon Duffy: English Reformation in Fiction/Faction

    Published: 24/04/2019
  8. Paul Anthony Murray: Catholic Ireland / Catholic Writing

    Published: 24/04/2019
  9. Paul Lakeland: The Grace of Creative Writing

    Published: 24/04/2019
  10. Ethna Regan and Timothy Radcliffe: Putting Our Own House in Order

    Published: 24/04/2019
  11. Agbonkhianmeghe Orobator and Anna Rowlands: Preferential Option

    Published: 24/04/2019
  12. Alana Harris and Tina Beattie: The Signs of the Times

    Published: 24/04/2019
  13. Clare Watkins: Authentic Catholic Living

    Published: 24/04/2019
  14. Jonathan Bush: Nicholas Wiseman and Ushaw

    Published: 24/04/2019
  15. Stephan Regan: Ushaw College Writers

    Published: 24/04/2019
  16. Nicholas Schofield: English College at Douai

    Published: 24/04/2019
  17. Gerard Kilroy: Edmund Campion, Dr Allen and the Secular State

    Published: 24/04/2019
  18. Eamon Duffy: eDouai, Rome, and the Tridentine Seminary

    Published: 24/04/2019
  19. Mark Hayes: Industry More Content, Finance Less Proud

    Published: 24/04/2019
  20. Universities as Places of Encounter Between Faith and Culture

    Published: 26/03/2019

5 / 7

The Durham Centre for Catholic Studies is the first of its kind in British higher education. It represents a creative partnership between academy and church: a centre within the pluralist, public academy for critically constructive Catholic studies of the highest academic standing. The aims of the Centre for Catholic Studies are: -To provide a distinctive forum for the creative analysis of key issues in Catholic thought, culture, and practice. -To engage, inform and shape public and ecclesial life from a leading knowledge and research base. -To engage the breadth and depth of Catholic tradition in conversation both with the full range of disciplines and perspectives in a leading university and with the range of other faith traditions. -To develop and pursue major collaborative and interdisciplinary research projects and to attract associated grant awards and philanthropic support. -To model a vibrant and inclusive community of scholars of Catholicism and practitioners of Catholic theology. -To form outstanding theologians who will shape the future from the richness of Catholic tradition in the church, academy, and public life. -To foster and develop excellent working relationships with relevant regional, national and international public and ecclesial bodies.

Visit the podcast's native language site