About Bradley J. Birzer

Bradley J. Birzer is the co-founder of, and Senior Contributor at, The Imaginative Conservative. He is the Russell Amos Kirk Chair in History at Hillsdale College and Fellow of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. Dr. Birzer is author of In Defense of Andrew Jackson, Russell Kirk: American Conservative, American Cicero: The Life of Charles Carroll, Sanctifying the World: The Augustinian Life and Mind of Christopher Dawson, J.R.R. Tolkien’s Sanctifying Myth: Understanding Middle-Earth, co-editor of The American Democrat and Other Political Writings by James Fenimore Cooper, and co-author of The American West.

Manifest Destiny and the American Nimrods

By |2021-04-22T18:28:33-05:00November 30th, 2018|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Bradley J. Birzer, History, Nationalism, Politics, Revolution, Social Order, Tyranny|

By the beginning of the Mexican war, even famed newspaper editor John L. O’Sullivan began to doubt his own expansionist infatuations. What would America do, for example, if she tried to incorporate not just Mexico but actual, honest-to-God Mexicans into the republic? Standing with his father as they watched the Battle of Bunker Hill in [...]

The First Shots of the Civil War: “The Star of the West”

By |2022-01-07T23:31:05-06:00November 13th, 2018|Categories: American Republic, Bradley Birzer Fort Sumter Series, Bradley J. Birzer, Civil War, Constitution, History, Senior Contributors, War|

The Union soldiers defending Forts Sumter and Moultrie in Charleston Harbor had come to believe that their honor, as well as the honor of the Constitution and the federal government, was at stake. Shortly after dawn, around 6 am, on January 9, 1861, Captain Abner Doubleday spotted a steamer preparing to enter Charleston Harbor by [...]

My America, 1620

By |2021-09-15T16:46:26-05:00October 31st, 2018|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, History|

As the political realm brings even more bitterness, more anger, and more division, it’s well worth remembering a time that we all share in common—the real founding of America by a group of ordered, well-armed, and determined Christian families. In 1620, an extraordinary thing happened. At a small landing on the extreme western edge of [...]

Anti-Catholicism in Early America & the Burning of a Convent

By |2019-06-25T17:07:01-05:00October 13th, 2018|Categories: American Republic, Bradley J. Birzer, Catholicism, Christianity, Senior Contributors|

One of the most important aspects of early American history is just how devoid of actual Roman Catholics it is. Obviously, on the North American continent, Catholicism throve in the French and Spanish areas and, frequently, among American Indians. Yet, when we consider the main narrative of American history—that told from the standpoint of Plymouth [...]

An Alternative to Removal: The Case of the Miami Indians

By |2023-05-26T10:22:16-05:00October 2nd, 2018|Categories: American West, Bradley J. Birzer, Government, History|

In the early nineteenth century, Americans assumed that the Indians would fall in line with the United States, recognizing the young republic as the indisputable new Great Father. But the title, they quickly found out, had to be earned. In 1818, Indian Commissioner Benjamin Parke attempted to treat with the Miamis, Weas, and Delawares but [...]

What Andrew Jackson’s Critics Get Wrong

By |2020-12-03T08:11:03-06:00September 24th, 2018|Categories: American Republic, American West, Bradley J. Birzer, In Defense of Andrew Jackson Series by Bradley Birzer, Presidency|

Like all human beings, Andrew Jackson certainly had his faults—sometimes spectacular, brutal, and violent ones—but is it just to label him, as one recent critic has, simply as "a slaver, ethnic cleanser, and tyrant"? Sometime in the last several years, it has become the cultural norm to see President Andrew Jackson as the sum of [...]

In Defense of Andrew Jackson

By |2021-03-14T14:47:00-05:00September 10th, 2018|Categories: American Republic, Books, Bradley J. Birzer, In Defense of Andrew Jackson Series by Bradley Birzer, Presidency|

The vast majority of Americans think of Andrew Jackson as a despicable man: a scoundrel, an uncouth violent redneck, hell-bent on the imperial expansion of the United States with the American Indians his burnt offerings to whatever god he worshipped. But my research has revealed Jackson as a true American republican, a virtuous man of the [...]

Lewis, Letters, and Love

By |2021-04-23T12:29:21-05:00September 5th, 2018|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, Christian Humanism, Love, Paul Elmer More, T.S. Eliot|

Real, actual letters are a gift, an insight into our best and our worst selves. Unlike the present world of the ephemeral email and hatchet posts on social media, letters of the pre-internet era could be gorgeous works of art. In them, the writer shares just a bit of his soul, preserving it for time, [...]

Imagination and Conservatism

By |2019-07-03T14:24:21-05:00August 26th, 2018|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Education, Great Books, Imagination, J.R.R. Tolkien, The Imaginative Conservative|

Our world drowns in information, facts, bites, noise, opinions, and other particulars. Yet, even the best of our students have the most difficult time connecting one thing to another. It is myth that allows us to transcend the immediate and the ephemeral... About ten years ago, I proposed a course of study for first-year college [...]

C.S. Lewis: Man of Faith or Warmed-Over Pagan?

By |2021-04-23T12:38:00-05:00August 21st, 2018|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, Catholicism, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Religion|

When C.S. Lewis converted to Christianity in 1931, he admitted that he did so in large part because Christianity answered the pagan longings he had experienced in his love of mythology and of all things northern. Northern Irishman C.S. Lewis holds such an important place in the hearts, minds, and souls of American Protestants that [...]

Pride and the Fall in Tolkien’s Second Age

By |2021-04-23T13:57:52-05:00August 15th, 2018|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, Christianity, J.R.R. Tolkien, Literature|

J.R.R. Tolkien's story of Númenor is the story of Athens, Rome, Great Britain, the United States, and every power that began with the best of intentions and saw itself decline because of envy and pride. It is the story of the Fall in Eden. It is grim, timeless, and true. Unquestionably, Tolkien's mythology was massive [...]

Progressing Toward What? C.S. Lewis & “The Abolition of Man”

By |2021-04-23T14:17:15-05:00August 7th, 2018|Categories: Books, Bradley Birzer's Abolition of Man Series, Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, Christianity, Conservatism|

Seventy-five years after the publication of C.S. Lewis' The Abolition of Man, it is safe to say that the scientists and technologists and state makers and educational institutions and corporations have continued on the deadly path of making man not in the image of God, as manifested in nature, but in the image of some [...]

C.S. Lewis & The Abolition of “Progress”

By |2021-04-23T16:10:36-05:00July 31st, 2018|Categories: Bradley Birzer's Abolition of Man Series, Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, Christian Humanism, Ideology, Truth|

C.S. Lewis believed that immutable and timeless universal principles governed all persons throughout time and space. Though these principles would find manifestations particular to era, culture, and individual, the rules remained eternal. Additionally, these natural laws would always and everywhere be “self-evident.” Men might choose to ignore, distort, or mock them, but they could not [...]

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