Paul Elie speaks at last weekend's symposium honoring Flannery O'Connor's Wise Blood
Photo by Michael Dames
As a prospective student, I remember picking up countless flyers and leaflets from admissions offices around the country. If the on-campus events seemed interesting to me, I, naturally, became much more interested in the school. Fordham stood out to me then, and it certainly has not disappointed.
The Curran Center also offers an undergraduate program in American Catholic Studies. As described by Associate Director Angela O’Donnell, American Catholic Studies is a program for “academically motivated” students who want to study “the culture, the faith, the history, and the theology of the American Catholic Church.” For students both inside and outside of the department, the Curran Center offers courses that investigate Catholicism’s distinct permeation into personal histories, as well as into our larger popular and political culture. O’Donnell explains that the Curran Center would not be what it is without the foundational history of New York City and those whose Catholicism was influenced by it, i.e. Thomas Merton, Dorothy Day, and others. In this way, the Curran Center is a model of Fordham’s commitment to extending one’s academic life past the Third Avenue gates. As is evident by our blog, Fordham is inextricable from the social and professional opportunities offered by New York City. Yet the Curran Center, and similar bodies, make Fordham’s on and off-campus life academically enriching as well.
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