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.

The Best Form of Government

By |2023-10-19T08:57:24-05:00April 28th, 2016|Categories: Featured, Government, History, RAK, Russell Kirk|

Politics being the art of the possible, I venture to suggest here the general lineaments of the kind of government which seems reasonably consonant with true human happiness. I think that in this problem we need to refer to two principles. The first principle is that a good government allows the better and more energetic [...]

Why Does the True Conservative Defend Private Enterprise?

By |2023-10-19T08:59:28-05:00March 23rd, 2016|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, Prospects for Conservatives, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk|

The true conservative does defend private enterprise stoutly; and one of the reasons why he cherishes it is that private enterprise is the only really practicable system, in the modern world, for satisfying our economic wants; but even more than this, he defends private enterprise as a means to an end. That end is a society just and free, [...]

T.S. Eliot on Literary Decadence & Cultural Ruin

By |2023-10-19T09:00:40-05:00January 26th, 2016|Categories: Imagination, Literature, Morality, RAK, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot|

T.S. Eliot’s slim book about moral and immoral fiction may surprise anyone who first comes upon a copy. After Strange Gods: A Primer of Modern Heresy consists of three lectures delivered at the University of Virginia in 1933. These present an uncompromising denunciation of liberalism—both the liberalism of the nineteenth century and that of the twentieth [...]

Conservatism: A Social Concept

By |2018-10-16T20:24:26-05:00January 13th, 2016|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, Prospects for Conservatives, Quotation, RAK|

Conservatism, then, is not simply the concern of the people who have a great deal of property and influence: it is a social concept important to everyone who desires equal justice and personal freedom and all the lovable old ways of humanity. —Russell Kirk, Prospects for Conservatives: A Compass for Rediscovering the Permanent Things [...]

The Truly Humane Man

By |2023-10-19T09:01:49-05:00December 30th, 2015|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk|

A truly humane man is a person who knows we were not born yesterday. He is familiar with many of the great books and the great men of the past, and with the best in the thought of his own generation. He has received a training of mind and character that chastens and ennobles and [...]

Childhood of Darkness

By |2018-10-16T20:24:27-05:00December 27th, 2015|Categories: Imagination, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

With Gratefulness to dead ancestors and the living family. Of early memories, Kirk’s most painful is his crying for water in a hospital at Ann Arbor. At the age of three, Russell had contracted acute nephritis, fell scourge, and was puffed up to the likeness of a large ball, too hideous for his mother to [...]

The Purposeful Design of Providence: Edmund Burke

By |2019-12-19T13:16:52-06:00December 12th, 2015|Categories: Conservatism, Edmund Burke, Featured, RAK, Russell Kirk|

Conservatism, as a critically held system of ideas, is younger than equalitarianism and rationalism. For philosophical conservatism begins with Edmund Burke, who erected prescription and “prejudice”—by which he meant the supra-rational wisdom of the species—into a conscious and imaginative defense of the traditional ways of society. When the age of Miracles lay faded into the [...]

The Unbought Grace of Life: Liberal Learning

By |2019-10-10T14:57:01-05:00December 2nd, 2015|Categories: Civilization, Featured, Liberal Learning, Prospects for Conservatives, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk|

What the church is to the spirit of religion, liberal learning is to the unbought grace of life—the only means for realizing the end. Where there is no liberal learning, in the long run there is no civilization—at least no civilization in our Christian and Western tradition. For some years or even generations after liberal [...]

New World Order: Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace?

By |2018-10-16T20:24:29-05:00November 4th, 2015|Categories: Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk|

Presidents of the United States must not be encouraged to make Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace, nor to fancy that they can establish a New World Order through eliminating dissenters. In the second century before Christ, the Romans generously liberated the Greek city-states from the yoke of Macedonia. But it was not long before the [...]

Education and the Information Revolution

By |2019-09-24T11:15:44-05:00October 18th, 2015|Categories: Education, Featured, Intelligence, Liberal Learning, RAK, Russell Kirk, Technology|

The people of the United States spend annually upon higher learning more money, probably, than did all the nations of the world combined, from the foundation of the ancient universities down to the beginning of the Second World War. In the United States, ever since the Second World War and especially during the past two [...]

Teaching Humane Literature in High Schools

By |2019-01-07T13:57:22-06:00July 24th, 2015|Categories: Education, Featured, Liberal Learning, Literature, RAK, Russell Kirk|

In many American high schools, the teaching of literature is in the sere and yellow leaf. One reason for this decay is the unsatisfactory quality of many programs of reading; another is the limited knowledge of humane letters possessed by some well-intentioned teachers, uncertain of what books they ought to select for their students to [...]

May the Rising Generation Redeem the Time

By |2018-10-22T12:15:40-05:00July 10th, 2015|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, RAK, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

Editor’s Note:  The Imaginative Conservative was born on July 10, 2010, when we published our first essay, featuring a quotation by the great Russell Kirk. Since that day, we have published more than 3,400 additional essays, by more than 550 authors. We are proud of each of the excellent contributions that have graced our pages, and so, [...]

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