Conservatives and the Problems of Language: Rhetoric and Respectability

By |2016-04-15T10:03:55-05:00November 22nd, 2013|Categories: Conservatism, Language, M. E. Bradford, Rhetoric|Tags: |

Conservatives have struggled with the problem of adjusting their public posture so as to reflect changes in their situation. Following electoral triumph and the dramatic shift in the temper of their countrymen which produced so many encouraging results at the polls, they have been obliged to represent themselves, through the spoken or the written word, [...]

Common Core’s Substandard Writing Standards

By |2016-07-26T15:21:20-05:00November 21st, 2013|Categories: Anthony Esolen, Christianity, Common Core Curriculum, Education, Featured, History, Literature|Tags: |

I’ve donned my boots and leggings, and done what I had no desire to do. I am examining, with tedious scrutiny, the so-called Common Core Curriculum for literature and English, a new’n’improved set of standards for reading and writing in our schools from kindergarten to twelfth grade. I have read the essays, written by students, which [...]

Russell Kirk: A Worthy Tribute

By |2014-02-20T16:00:36-06:00November 20th, 2013|Categories: Russell Kirk|Tags: , |

The Unbought Grace of Life: Essays in Honor of Russell Kirk, edited by James E. Person Jr. This Festschrift was in galleys when Russell Kirk‘s health began failing. On learning of Kirk‘s decline, Sherwood Sugden photocopied the galleys and mailed them to Mecosta. The editor, James Person, a close friend of the Kirks, made the long trek [...]

Nostalgia and Desire in C.S. Lewis and T.S. Eliot

By |2019-12-13T15:55:39-06:00November 19th, 2013|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Christianity, Conservatism, Dwight Longenecker, T.S. Eliot|

There is an open space in the human heart–a void that seeks fulfillment and a hunger that longs for satisfaction. For the progressive this longing looks to the future. A brave new world is envisioned, an ideology is espoused and an action plan that brooks no dissent is put into place. For the conservative that [...]

John Lukacs’s Valediction

By |2013-11-19T06:06:25-06:00November 18th, 2013|Categories: John Lukacs, John Willson|Tags: |

John Lukacs and Wendell Berry This is the best introduction to the historical craft of John Lukacs. History and the Human Condition does not replace the much longer Remembered Past, a wide-ranging selection of Lukacs’s works also published by ISI Books. But this work, a coda to the author’s career, contains just the right mixture of [...]

Playing Games with Ender: How Hollywood Ideology Destroyed a Classic

By |2015-05-19T23:05:42-05:00November 17th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Culture, Film|

Orson Scott Card’s science fiction classic, Ender’s Game is defined by moral ambiguity. A book about children, it is no children’s book. In it, six-year-olds already find themselves in military schools, fighting for the chance to enter the off-planet Battle School where they will leave behind all thoughts of family and home for round-the-clock military [...]

Conservatism: Its Meaning and Prospects

By |2016-08-03T10:37:00-05:00November 17th, 2013|Categories: Christendom, Conservatism, Liberalism|Tags: , |

Conservatism at bottom is resistance to the technocratic project, the modern attempt to turn the social world into a sort of universal machine for the maximum satisfaction of preferences. That project has been growing up for a long time. It comes out of an understanding of knowledge and the world with its roots in the early [...]

Never Ending Lives & The Fallacies of Hope

By |2019-07-09T14:21:48-05:00November 16th, 2013|Categories: Books, Christianity, Edmund Burke|

Dorian Gray and Raymond Fosca are famous fictional characters renowned for miraculously being granted their wish to live forever without aging. But, whereas the protagonist in Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray is a self-indulgent sensualist, Simone de Beauvoir’s novel All Men Are Mortal depicts Raymond Fosca as someone dedicated to bettering the lives of his countrymen. Raymond [...]

“Cry Wolf”: An “Animal Farm” for the 21st Century

By |2022-08-16T16:06:00-05:00November 16th, 2013|Categories: Great Books, Literature, Politics, Social Order|Tags: , |

George Orwell’s delightful, brief narrative acts as a fable: its animal characters allow us to see afresh well-worn and conventional truths. The fable warns us of what we already know, but must learn again and again if we are not to be fooled into historical optimism. By the time George Orwell’s Animal Farm appeared in August [...]

Religion and “The Conservative Mind”

By |2021-05-10T23:34:20-05:00November 15th, 2013|Categories: Political Science Reviewer, Russell Kirk, The Conservative Mind|Tags: , |

To know The Conservative Mind is to know the mind of its remarkable author, Russell Kirk. He was an old-fashioned man—courtly, retiring, serene, formal in dress and manner—whose view of the world, proclaimed by every photograph, was traditional, anti-modern, even obscure. Captured in his study, his library, his home, surrounded by pens, books, family, and friends, he [...]

Good Sense, Conservatism and Faith

By |2019-04-25T11:23:06-05:00November 14th, 2013|Categories: Faith|Tags: , |

Is religious faith necessary for conservatism? A more basic question is whether it is necessary for good sense, since it is for the sake of good sense that we are conservative. If it were otherwise, conservatism would be a hobby or an ideology, and it is neither; it is simply the appearance good sense takes [...]

Go to Top