Tag Archives: Political Theology

Thomas Pynchon, the Problem of Scale, and the Emergence of Densified Noir

This essay argues that Thomas Pynchon’s career alternates between maximalist “cathedral” novels that map the formation of modern systems and more compressed works that depict life inside those systems. Rather than decline, the shift from Gravity’s Rainbow to Inherent Vice reflects historical contraction. Shadow Ticket suggests a late hybrid form: densified noir.

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"The Donation of Constantine" – Raphael's workshop

The Empire and the Cross: Dante’s Vision of Universal Rule in De Monarchia

This article explores Dante’s political treatise De Monarchia, in which he argues for a divinely ordained universal empire distinct from the Church. Combining Roman law, Aristotelian philosophy, and Thomistic theology, Dante envisions imperial rule as the necessary foundation for peace, justice, and the fulfilment of humanity’s earthly potential.

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