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.

America, I Love You

By |2018-10-16T20:24:50-05:00July 10th, 2013|Categories: Literature, RAK, Russell Kirk, War|

Russell Kirk Like an emerald dropped by Sinbad’s roc into the Valley of the Serpents, Camp James Wilkinson, amidst the sand, sparkled from the red sun that was setting in Nevada across the salt flats. The serpents were literal enough, since rattlesnakes crushed by wheels of military trucks lay dead every day across [...]

We Live by Myth

By |2018-10-16T20:24:52-05:00June 4th, 2013|Categories: Imagination, Myth, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk|

All great systems, ethical or political, attain their ascendancy over the minds of men by virtue of their appeal to the imagination; and when they cease to touch the chords of wonder and mystery and hope, their power is lost, and men look elsewhere for some set of principles by which they may be guided. [...]

English Letters in the Age of Boredom

By |2019-10-30T13:35:41-05:00April 27th, 2013|Categories: Books, Literature, Moral Imagination, RAK, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot|Tags: |

Some day I shall write a book with the title The Age of Eliot (ed., published as Eliot and His Age). The span of Mr. T. S. Eliot’s life, extending from the ascendancy of President Cleveland and Lord Salisbury to our present troubled hour, has been characterized by as much material change as any age in the whole [...]

The Permanent Things

By |2018-10-16T20:24:53-05:00February 9th, 2013|Categories: Permanent Things, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot|

T.S. Eliot By “the Permanent Things” [T. S. Eliot] meant those elements in the human condition that give us our nature, without which we are as the beasts that perish. They work upon us all in the sense that both they and we are bound up in that continuity of belief and institution called the [...]

What is the Object of Human Life?

By |2018-10-16T20:24:55-05:00January 29th, 2013|Categories: Conservatism, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk, W. Winston Elliott III|

Russell Kirk In the paragraphs below, from A Program for Conservatives, Dr. Russell Kirk addresses conservatives with words which remind us of our pilgrim status in this world of tears. We are not called to material success. We are called to obedience. We are called to love. The True, the Good, and the Beautiful will find their true [...]

The Living Edmund Burke

By |2019-12-17T19:48:37-06:00January 12th, 2013|Categories: Conservatism, Edmund Burke, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

Getting up in recent months an anthology of conservative writing, The Portable Conservative Reader, I had reason to reread much of Burke. More than ever before, I was impressed with how relevant Burke’s thoughts - and, indeed, Burke’s actions - remain to our present discontents. (It is with some reluctance I employ that word “relevant,” [...]

“The Conservative Mind”: An Interview With Russell Kirk

By |2023-05-11T09:40:33-05:00January 9th, 2013|Categories: Books, Conservatism, RAK, Russell Kirk, The Conservative Mind|

I'd say a conservative is a person who prefers the devil he knows to the devil he doesn't. He knows there are always ills and devils in the world, and he would rather get along with present imperfections than dash into some ruinous and impossible scheme of perfectibility. Editor's Note: This interview, conducted in the [...]

Three Great Bodies of Principle and Conviction

By |2018-10-16T20:24:57-05:00January 8th, 2013|Categories: Conservatism, RAK, Russell Kirk|

Cant and equivocation dismissed, it seems to me that there are three great bodies of principle and conviction that tie together what is called modern civilization. The first of these is the Christian faith: the theological and moral doctrines which inform us, either side of the Atlantic, of the nature of God and man, the [...]

May the Rising Generation Redeem the Time?

By |2018-10-16T20:24:57-05:00January 1st, 2013|Categories: American Republic, Conservatism, Featured, RAK, Russell Kirk|

This evening, ladies and gentlemen, I conclude my lecture series with some desultory remarks on the possibility of redemption from error—and, in particular, whether our rising generation in these United States may find it possible to “redeem the time, redeem the dream”—to borrow T.S. Eliot’s line First, a few words about this concept “generation.” To [...]

On Malcolm X

By |2023-06-27T19:26:16-05:00December 14th, 2012|Categories: Equality|Tags: |

On Irving Kupcinet’s Chicago television program, Malcolm X and this commentator participated in a  discussion of public affairs, a few months ago. Now Malcolm X—or Malcolm Little, as he was born—has been murdered before hundreds of people. Revolutions do, indeed, devour their own children. Somewhat to my surprise, I found Malcolm X to be a [...]

The Moral Imagination

By |2018-10-16T20:24:58-05:00November 30th, 2012|Categories: Books, Conservatism, Featured, Great Books, History, Literature, Moral Imagination, Philosophy, RAK, Russell Kirk|

Russell Kirk What is this “moral imagination”? The phrase is Edmund Burke’s, and it occurs in his Reflections on the Revolution in France. Burke describes the destruction of civilizing manners by the revolutionaries: In the franchise bookshops the shelves are crowded with the prickly pears and the Dead Sea fruit of literary decadence. [...]

What Are American Traditions?

By |2018-10-16T20:24:58-05:00November 23rd, 2012|Categories: Conservatism, Film, Moral Imagination, RAK, Russell Kirk, Tradition|

“Nobody can make a tradition,” Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote; “it takes a century to make it.” There are American traditions, because there have been three centuries of American history; yet this is a brief period of time, when one remembers that some of the traditions of Europe and Asia and Africa have their roots in a [...]

Ten Conservative Principles

By |2018-10-30T22:52:40-05:00November 6th, 2012|Categories: Conservatism, Russell Kirk|

Being neither a religion nor an ideology, the body of opinion termed conservatism possesses no Holy Writ and no Das Kapital to provide dogmata. So far as it is possible to determine what conservatives believe, the first principles of the conservative persuasion are derived from what leading conservative writers and public men have professed during the [...]

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