Eugene McCarraher

About

Eugene McCarraher is an associate professor of humanities at Villanova University and author of The Enchantments of Mammon: Capitalism as the Religion of Modernity.

Only Connect

from In Need of Repair, Volume 26, Number 3

An unsettling study of “connective labor” and its increasing subjection to bureaucratic and technological control.

A Divine Comedy

from America on the Brink, Volume 22, Number 3

Like the “radical orthodoxy” associated with John Milbank, Stanley Hauerwas, and an array of other British and American theologians, Hart’s project of rejuvenation has been no narrowly theological or academic exercise.

Dearly Beloved

from The Evening of Life, Volume 20, Number 3

Although he was more iconoclast than apostle, Bourne can point us toward a politics of love.

Prophecy in Unbelieving Form

from The Post-Modern Self, Volume 19, Number 1

“Critical theory” was the Frankfurt School’s elaborate alibi for the proletariat’s dereliction of its historical duty.

We Have Never Been Disenchanted

from Re-enchantment, Volume 17, Number 3

Capitalism has been a form of enchantment, a metamorphosis of the sacred in the raiment of secularity. With money as its ontological marrow, it represents a moral and metaphysical imagination as well as a sublimation of our desire for the presence of divinity in the everyday world.

Redeeming Narcissism

from Too Much Information, Volume 17, Number 1

Conceding the pathological potential of narcissism, the book affirms that it can also be a “wellspring of human ambition and creativity, values and ideals, empathy and fellow feeling.

Capitalism and Our Moral Imagination

from Work and Dignity, Volume 14, Number 3

Markets and property systems are related, but they are not the same: markets are about exchange and money; property about ownership and power.

Domestic Arrangements

from Meditations on Exile and Home, Volume 7, Number 3

For too long, Americans have followed Thoreau back to the safety of the hut, only to discover that the lives they lived were full of quiet desperation.