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The Thomistic Institute

Flannery O'Connor and the Perils of Governing By Tenderness – Dr. Jerome Foss

The Thomistic Institute

The Thomistic Institute

Christianity, Religion &Amp; Spirituality, Society & Culture, Catholic Intellectual Tradition, Catholic, Philosophy, Religion & Spirituality, Thomism, Catholicism

4.8729 Ratings

🗓️ 23 October 2025

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dr. Jerome Foss uses Flannery O’Connor’s stories to warn against the pitfalls of governing by abstract tenderness, advocating for a vision rooted in faith, realism, and the transformative power of suffering.


This lecture was given on February 12th, 2025, at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.


For more information on upcoming events, visit us at thomisticinstitute.org/upcoming-events.


About the Speakers:


Jerome C. Foss is Professor of Politics, Endowed Director of the Center for Catholic Thought and Culture, and Director of the SVC Core Curriculum at Saint Vincent College in Latrobe, Pennsylvania. Foss earned his BA from the University of Dallas and his MA and PhD from Baylor University. His research focuses on Catholic political thought, American political thought, and literature and political philosophy. His most recent book, Flannery O'Connor and the Perils of Governing by Tenderness, brings these interests together. He has also published on the history of political philosophy, the U.S. Constitution, Constitutional Law, James Madison, and Abraham Lincoln. He is currently working on a scholarly book on the first ten amendments to the Constitution (commonly known as the Bill of Rights) and a book for a more general Catholic audience on the Declaration of Independence. Foss enjoys teaching a variety of courses, including courses on the Constitutional Convention and Shakespeare as a political thinker. As Director of the CCTC, Foss helps administer the college's Benedictine Leadership Studies Program, has developed and led the colleges summer program in Rome, founded and edits an academic journal entitled Conversatio, and organizes conferences, seminars, and other events.


Keywords: Abstract Tenderness, Alexis De Tocqueville, Christian Vision, Evil And Suffering, Flannery O’Connor, Moral Clarity, Nihilism, Real Presence, Storytelling Vocation, Theological Realism

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Tomistic Institute podcast.

0:06.2

Our mission is to promote the Catholic intellectual tradition in the university, the church, and the wider public square.

0:12.7

The lectures on this podcast are organized by university students at Temistic Institute chapters around the world.

0:19.0

To learn more and to attend these events,

0:21.7

visit us at to mystic institute.org.

0:25.3

How many of you are familiar with Flannery O'Connor?

0:28.2

Oh, good.

0:30.3

How many of you have read at least one short story

0:32.9

of Flannery O'Connor's?

0:35.6

Okay, what about at least five stories? Anyone read a novel?

0:40.3

Okay, good.

0:43.3

You've read a lot.

0:44.3

So that's good.

0:45.3

All right, well, it sounds like most people are familiar with her.

0:49.3

I, as James said, I'm a political scientist, so I'm not by training somebody who studies literature,

0:58.0

although I went to a PhD program, both an undergraduate program and a PhD program where literature was taken quite seriously.

1:06.0

So I did read literature as part of my studies at Baylor, but not O'Connor. We read a lot of Shakespeare

1:13.0

and other things. I wrote my dissertation on John Rawls. How many of you've read John Rawls?

1:21.3

Okay, fewer of you. That's good. John Rawls, it kind of was an accident in a way that I found myself in a position where

1:30.3

I had something to say about John Rawls in American politics, and so that became my dissertation.

1:35.3

I thought it would be a good thing to do when I was on the job market and it worked, I guess,

1:40.3

but spending three years with John Rawls and then turning it into a book afterwards, which

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