Lectures in Catholic Experience - The God Beat: Writing About Religion in the 21st Century
Lectures in Catholic Experience - You've Come A Long Way Baby! Or have you?
Bridges Lecture Series - Zombies: Monsters with Meaning
Lectures in Catholic Experience - The Paradox of Pleasure: Jean Vanier and the Growth of L'Arche
Bridges Lecture Series - The Glass Problem: Changing and Challenging Material Definitions
Despite thousands of years of history, glass still challenges our perceptions and definitions. In this lecture, Drs. Charbonneau and Larson tackle “the glass problem”, to explore and understand the mutable properties of a material which is, by definition, disorderly.
Lectures in Catholic Experience - Gender: But That is What the Church has Always Taught!
In June 2019 the Vatican released a statement on gender theory, “Male and Female He Created Them.” Responses to the document show that many Catholics still accept two myths about Church teaching on gender. The first is that it is unchanging, and the second is that it always comes from the top down. Yet, Pope Francis has also spoken of a need for both rethinking Church teaching and more dialogue. In this lecture, Dr. Tataryn shows that Church teaching, especially in the area of sexuality, is not static but has changed over the centuries.
Medieval Studies Lecture Series - Problematising Sex and Gender in Later Medieval Europe
Multi-Million Dollar Medievalists
St. Jerome’s University is pleased to announce that Dr. Steven Bednarski has been awarded $2.5 million in federal research funding in the form of a seven year Partnership Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). Dr. Bednarski is a professor of Medieval History at St. Jerome’s University at the University of Waterloo, and is the primary investigator and lead applicant on the research partnership entitled Environments of Change: Digitizing Nature, History and Human Experience in Late Medieval Sussex.
Debates “en français”
Next chapter completed making Confederation debates and records more accessible to Canadians.