The beloved Dirty Book Sale is back and ready for its best year yet! In addition to the sale, which features incredible prices on overstock, dusty, or slightly damaged books, the University of Notre Dame Press is proud to host the first annual Notre Dame Press Book Festival. The Festival will feature book events, a publishing workshop, autographed books, and prizes. The Notre Dame Press Book Festival and Dirty Book Sale will take place in the Hesburgh Library on November 6th and 7th between 12 pm and 8:30 pm daily.…
Read More
The University of Notre Dame Press’s own Editor in Chief will lead a workshop about demystifying the academic publishing process at 5:30 pm on November 6th. This workshop is a part of the Notre Dame Press Book Festival.
Learn more at undpress.nd.edu/bookfestival…
Read More
The beloved Dirty Book Sale is back and ready for its best year yet! In addition to the sale, which features incredible prices on overstock, dusty, or slightly damaged books, the University of Notre Dame Press is proud to host the first annual Notre Dame Press Book Festival. The Festival will feature book events, a publishing workshop, autographed books, and prizes. The Notre Dame Press Book Festival and Dirty Book Sale will take place in the Hesburgh Library on November 6th and 7th between 12 pm and 8:30 pm daily.…
Read More

Celebrating 20 years, this year's conference will explore the theme of friendship, from its ancient understanding as "the crown of life and the school of virtue" (C.S. Lewis) to the present day. What does it mean to make the good of another one's own, and what might be the implications of losing such an understanding of friendship in the modern world? In the interdisciplinary spirit of the Fall Conference, the dCEC will engage these themes from a wide array of fields of inquiry, including theology, philosophy, political theory, law, history, economics, and the social sciences, as well as the natural sciences, literature, and the arts.…
Read More

Judge Stephanos Bibas, US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, will speak on "The Decline of Mercy in Criminal Justice and Public Life." This talk is free and open to the public. Complimentary lunch will be provided.
This event is cosponsored by the Notre Dame Law School St. Thomas More Society, the Christian Legal Society, and the Federalist Society.…
Read More

Celebrating 20 years, this year's conference will explore the theme of friendship, from its ancient understanding as "the crown of life and the school of virtue" (C.S. Lewis) to the present day. What does it mean to make the good of another one's own, and what might be the implications of losing such an understanding of friendship in the modern world? In the interdisciplinary spirit of the Fall Conference, the dCEC will engage these themes from a wide array of fields of inquiry, including theology, philosophy, political theory, law, history, economics, and the social sciences, as well as the natural sciences, literature, and the arts.…
Read More

Celebrating 20 years, this year's conference will explore the theme of friendship, from its ancient understanding as "the crown of life and the school of virtue" (C.S. Lewis) to the present day. What does it mean to make the good of another one's own, and what might be the implications of losing such an understanding of friendship in the modern world? In the interdisciplinary spirit of the Fall Conference, the dCEC will engage these themes from a wide array of fields of inquiry, including theology, philosophy, political theory, law, history, economics, and the social sciences, as well as the natural sciences, literature, and the arts.…
Read More

In the classical Greek and Roman world, mercy was thought of as the prerogative of power and authority exercised in mitigating punishment. In this lecture, John O’Callaghan will explain how it was in and through the life of the early Church that mercy became compassionate care for those whom one conceives of as “friends by nature”—any human being whom one encounters as suffering—and consider ways in which our society has returned to the pre-Christian pagan model.…
Read More

Enjoy a free lunch and seminar-style conversation with Fr. Terrence Ehrman, C.S.C., chaplain to the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture. Sponsored by the McGrath Institute for Church Life.
Lunch is free but you must register.
Originally published at mcgrath.nd.edu…
Read More