

Another Life with Joy Marie Clarkson
Plough
How can we live well together? What gives life purpose? How do technology, education, faith, capitalism, work, family change the way we live? Is another life possible? Plough editor Joy Marie Clarkson digs deeper into perspectives from a wide variety of writers and thinkers appearing in the pages of Plough.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 1, 2022 • 1h 16min
23: Resident Aliens and the Illiberalism of the Body
Peter and Susannah discuss Kelsey Osgood’s piece “Stranger in a Strange Land” with her, about her adult conversion to Orthodox Judaism and her family’s attempt to find a place where, practicing that faith, they can feel at home.Then, they speak with Leah Libresco Sargeant about her three most recent pieces for Plough: on dependence and illiberalism, on the question of whose bodies matter in our public discussions, and on how design for those with and without disabilities can make a welcoming world.How do we raise our children in a faith without driving them away from it? How can we make a world that is welcoming to all human people, not just those who match the pattern of the adult male liberal subject?

Jan 25, 2022 • 1h 12min
22: Velvet Eugenics and Parenting Kids with Down Syndrome
Pete and Susannah speak with Emory bioethicist Rosemarie Garland-Thomson about her ongoing philosophical journey into bioethical questions, and her critique of market-and-autonomy based ideas about human worth. Might an ethic of caution, care, and doing no harm provide a path forward for disagreement about personhood in the case of abortion?They also discuss Denmark’s famed “eradication” of Down syndrome, and its cost: the eradication of people with Down syndrome.Then, they speak with J. D. Flynn about a recent Times piece exposing the extreme unreliability of prenatal genetic testing, and the assumptions that the piece makes (by implication) about the value of human selves.Flynn also describes his and his wife’s own experiences as parents of two adopted children with Down syndrome and one biological child without it: how can we receive all children, adopted and not, of all “kinds,” as gifts?

Jan 18, 2022 • 1h 3min
21: Disability, Embodiment, and What It Means to Be Human
Susannah and Peter talk with O. Carter Snead about his book What it Means to be Human: The Case for the Body in Public Bioethics. They examine the question of the anthropology of expressive individualism as the framework for our current legal bioethical regime, and look at hot-button cultural issues including abortion, assisted reproduction, assisted suicide, and end-of-life care.How should we die? How can we value and care for those who no longer have the same abilities they had when they were younger, but who are still vital members of the human family?How should we make babies? How can we guard the mystery and gift of children from a false sense of our own mastery over their creation?How should we live? How can we become the people we are meant to be by exercising care towards those who need our help, and by receiving care from those who love us?

Jan 11, 2022 • 1h 25min
20: Suffering, Reality, and Rehumanization
Peter and Susannah discuss Aimee Murphy’s Rehumanize, an organization dedicated to a consistent life ethic, and the intersection between the pro-life movement and the disability rights movement.How does the utilitarian obsession with quality of life and rejection of those who suffer attack the dignity of all of us? And how can an awareness of the existence of sufferers pull us out of our own meritocratic prisons?Then, the hosts talk with Ross Douthat about his chronic Lyme disease and the way that official science can be limited. What does the experience of suffering teach us about the reality of the divine, and how do these liminal states open us up to transcendent reality?

Jan 4, 2022 • 1h 5min
19: On Ability and Disability, Personhood and Motherhood
Peter and Susannah discuss Peter’s lead editorial, describing his friendship with and care for a profoundly disabled young man. They consider the simultaneous truths of the good of health, the resurrection of the body, and the full image of God in the bodies and lives of disabled people.They discuss the phenomenon of the “Ugly laws” of the 19th and 20th centuries, the Nazi eugenics program, the limitations of communitarianism, and the way that questions of disability touch on everybody, because they are about what it means to be a human in a body.Then they welcome Plough contributor Victoria Reynolds Farmer, a writer with cerebral palsy who discusses her Marian devotion, her recent Catholic conversion, and what that has meant for her marriage and the prospect of motherhood.

Dec 28, 2021 • 32min
The PloughRead: The Three Young Kings by George Sumner Albee
Three boys play the Three Kings who deliver gifts on the eve of Epiphany. But what will they give the poor children they pass on the street? A delightful story of strong tradition broken by the power of love.

Dec 21, 2021 • 38min
The PloughRead: The Christmas Rose by Selma Lagerlöf
This story is one of several Swedish legends explaining why the Christmas Rose blooms in winter.

Dec 7, 2021 • 30min
The PloughRead: The Quest for Home by Santiago Ramos
Santiago Ramos on his outsiderness, the double homelessness immigrants live with that points to the eternal home.Read it here: https://www.plough.com/en/topics/justice/social-justice/immigration/the-quest-for-home

Nov 30, 2021 • 24min
The PloughRead: Three Kants and a Thousand Skulls by Simeon Wiehler
Simeon Wiehler, university dean in Rwanda, reflects on cruelty and healing in a land scarred by genocide, drawing on philosopher Immanuel Kant; Richard Kandt, a German colonialist obsessed with craniometry; and a young student, also named Kant.Read it here: https://www.plough.com/en/topics/justice/politics/human-rights/three-kants-and-a-thousand-skulls

Nov 23, 2021 • 24min
The PloughRead: In Search of Lost Fig Trees by Stephanie Saldaña
Far from home, one father transplants fig trees. Another crafts chocolates. A third creates places of welcome. Stephanie Saldaña, Naomi Shihab Nye, and Nour Al Ghraowi: three daughters give voice to each man's story, as their lives interweave.Read it here: https://www.plough.com/en/topics/justice/reconciliation/in-search-of-lost-fig-trees


