About Russell Kirk

Russell Kirk (1918-1994) was the author of some thirty-two books, hundreds of periodical essays, and many short stories. Both Time and Newsweek have described him as one of America’s leading thinkers, and The New York Times acknowledged the scale of his influence when in 1998 it wrote that Dr. Kirk’s 1953 book The Conservative Mind “gave American conservatives an identity and a genealogy and catalyzed the postwar movement.” Dr. Kirk's other books include The Roots of American Order, Prospects for Conservatives, Edmund Burke: A Genius Reconsidered, The Sword of Imagination, and Enemies of the Permanent Things.

Pieper on Justice

By |2018-10-16T20:25:23-05:00May 12th, 2011|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

Josef Pieper Selected by Bradley J. Birzer Justice is the principle which makes our civil social order possible: and Dr. Pieper’s piercing essay is designed to refresh this generation’s memory of the meaning of that great word. “To each his own”; this classical definition remains the best expression of the concept. Relating the [...]

Russell Kirk and "The Age of Eliot," 1956

By |2018-10-16T20:25:24-05:00May 11th, 2011|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Literature, RAK, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot|

All below taken from Russell Kirk, “English Letters in the Age of Boredom,” Shenandoah 7 (Spring, 1956): 3-15. “It is quite within the realm of possibility that the Age of Eliot will be succeeded by a long gulf of vacancy in the history of literature.…Universal war and social dissolution might bring this calamity upon us, [...]

Conservatism is Not an Ideology

By |2018-10-16T20:25:24-05:00April 18th, 2011|Categories: Conservatism, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk|

Conservatism, I repeat, is not an ideology. It does not breed fanatics. It does not try to excite the enthusiasm of a secular religion. If you want men who will sacrifice their past and present and future to a set of abstract ideas, you must go to Communism, or Fascism, or  Benthamism. But if you [...]

Americans-Endowed with Conservative Prejudices

By |2018-10-16T20:25:25-05:00April 17th, 2011|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk|

Russell Kirk We Americans were from the first a people endowed with strong conservative prejudices, immeasurably influenced by the spirit of religious veneration, firm in a traditional morality, hostile to arbitrary power whether possessed by a monarch or a mob, zealous to guard against centralization, attached to prescriptive rights, convinced of the necessity [...]

The Thinking Conservative-A Radical

By |2018-10-16T20:25:26-05:00April 14th, 2011|Categories: Conservatism, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk|

The thinking conservative, in truth, must take on some of the outward characteristic of the radical, today: he must poke about the roots of society, in the hope of restoring vigor to an old tree half strangled in the rank undergrowth of modern passions. The conservative does not much enjoy this unaccustomed function, for, with [...]

History and the Moral Imagination

By |2018-10-16T20:25:27-05:00April 13th, 2011|Categories: Books, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, John Lukacs, Moral Imagination, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

Historical Consciousness: The Remembered Past by John Lukacs, Transaction Publishers (Library of Conservative Thought), 1994. Applying a philosophical intellect to the study of history, Dr. Lukacs believes that historical studies may become the principal literary form and way to wisdom in the dawning age. This does not mean that he endeavors to present a “philosophy [...]

Civilization Without Religion?

By |2022-03-05T15:35:29-06:00April 9th, 2011|Categories: Civilization, Culture, RAK, Religion, Russell Kirk|

Sobering voices tell us nowadays that the civilization in which we participate is not long for this world. Many countries have fallen under the domination of squalid oligarchs; other lands are reduced to anarchy. “Cultural revolution,” rejecting our patrimony of learning and manners, has done nearly as much mischief in the West as in the [...]

Roots of American Order

By |2018-10-16T20:25:30-05:00April 2nd, 2011|Categories: Quotation, RAK, Roots of American Order, Russell Kirk|

by Russell Kirk Seek­ing for the roots of order, we are led to four cities: Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, and Lon­don. In Wash­ing­ton or New York or Chicago or Los Ange­les today, the order which Amer­i­cans expe­ri­ence is derived from the expe­ri­ence of those four old cities. If our souls are dis­or­dered, we fall into abnor­mal­ity, [...]

The Conservative Purpose of a Liberal Arts Education

By |2018-10-16T20:25:31-05:00March 30th, 2011|Categories: Conservatism, Culture, Liberal Learning, RAK, Russell Kirk|

The following quotes, excerpted from the article “The Conservative Purpose of a Liberal Education” by Russell Kirk, emphasize the importance of liberal education–in the sense of an education that liberates the person from ignorance in vice–for the preservation of conservative ideals.  “The Conservative Purpose of a Liberal Education,” Redeeming the Time by Russell Kirk(Wilmington: ISI Books, [...]

Learn to Love the Little Platoon We Belong To

By |2018-10-16T20:25:32-05:00March 27th, 2011|Categories: Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk, The Conservative Mind|

Conservatism’s most conspicuous difficulty in our time is that conservative leaders confront a people who have come to look upon society, vaguely, as a homogeneous mass of identical individuals whose happiness may be obtained by direction from above, through legislation or some scheme of public instruction. Conservatives endeavor to teach humanity once more that the [...]

A Foreign Policy for Conservatives: Robert Taft

By |2018-10-16T20:25:33-05:00March 26th, 2011|Categories: Books, Foreign Affairs, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

For the object of American foreign-policy, Robert Taft argued repeatedly, is to protect and advance American national interests. Neutrality or intervention, alliances and restrictions upon armaments, international commercial agreements and assistance to other governments, peace or war, all must be determined by reference to the effects of such policies upon the security and the welfare [...]

Go to Top