A Tocqueville Christmas

By |2014-12-10T11:37:07-06:00December 17th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Culture, Gifts for Imaginative Conservatives|

Alexis de Tocqueville Alexis de Tocqueville came to America in 1831. Though the French aristocrat came for only nine and a half months, his understanding of America and democratic peoples more broadly has never been matched. Most imaginative conservatives have probably read Tocqueville (and may well be some of the nation’s great experts) [...]

Tyranny in American Political Discourse

By |2017-10-11T23:23:05-05:00December 1st, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Politics, Revolution, Tyranny|Tags: |

The word “tyranny” has a long history in American political discourse. Since at least the American Revolution, Americans have used the word to describe political actions they find distasteful. But what is tyranny? Some have defined tyranny to be identical with monarchy; others identify it with any form of government which is not democratic, or [...]

Tocqueville on the Individualist Roots of Progressivism

By |2019-04-11T10:35:41-05:00November 29th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Conservatism, Progressivism|Tags: , |

A friend once described conservatives as people who agreed about one important thing–that at some point in the past, something went terribly wrong. After that, conservatives splinter into untold numbers of camps, since they disagree ferociously about the date of the catastrophe. Most conservatives today agree that America has taken a terrible turn–that something went [...]

The Good and Bad of Democracy

By |2019-08-22T11:22:39-05:00September 3rd, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Bruce Frohnen, Democracy, Democracy in America|

I have been rereading Alexis de Tocqueville’s masterful Democracy in America.  This book, written in the first half of the nineteenth century by a French aristocrat for his countrymen, remains standard reading for American college students and even some of their professors. In a way it is too bad that we tend to read it [...]

Civic Engagement: Making Students Partisan Activists

By |2014-03-28T15:52:25-05:00June 24th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Education, Peter A. Lawler|

As a professor of political science, I can’t help but be concerned with all the enthusiasm about “civic engagement” as some radically transformative, disruptive, “Copernican” revolution in higher education. All the literature that makes such bogus claims is rife with management-speak barely masking progressive ideology. It makes the agenda-driven proclamation that the point of higher [...]

The Aristocratic Sources of Liberty: A Brilliant Critique of Tocqueville

By |2013-11-21T13:44:01-06:00June 10th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Books, Democracy in America, Lee Cheek|Tags: , |

Tocqueville: The Aristocratic Sources of Liberty by Lucien Jaume While this profound, and elegantly written and translated work, will not appeal to all scholars of political thought, Lucien Jaume (Centre Recherche Politiques de Sciences Po) nevertheless provides many insights into the life and work of the great French student of American social and political life.  Emphasizing [...]

We Won: Burke and De Tocqueville

By |2014-01-18T15:59:53-06:00May 24th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Edmund Burke, Peter Stanlis, Russell Kirk|

Figureheads Coming and Going For any of us interested in the history of post-war American conservatism (and, I assume you must be, or you wouldn’t be reading The Imaginative Conservative), we owe an immense debt to several historical figures and personalities—most immediately to Edmund Burke and Alexis de Tocqueville, but also to Cicero, St. Augustine [...]

Are Conservatives (or Libertarians) Ruining Liberal Education?

By |2013-12-27T18:22:00-06:00May 9th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Conservatism, Liberal Learning, Libertarianism, Peter A. Lawler|

Plenty of liberals—and not just liberal professors—think there is a conservative conspiracy to use online education and MOOCs, to destroy genuinely higher education in this country. I see no organized conspiracy, and much of the liberal paranoia amounts to whining about the results of legitimate political defeats. Nonetheless, there is something to the thought that hostility [...]

The Conservatives vs. the Intellectuals?

By |2018-12-21T14:56:56-06:00February 11th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Conservatism, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Peter A. Lawler, Politics|

So everyone’s talking about the article by the intellectual Russell Jacoby on the alleged fact that there are no conservative intellectuals anymore. The article isn’t much good, in fact. One problem is that it doesn’t really explain what an intellectual is. The first outstanding criticism of modern intellectuals came from the lefty philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau. [...]

What Sort of Despotism Democratic Nations Have to Fear

By |2024-07-27T21:01:42-05:00February 1st, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, American Founding, American Republic, Books, Christendom, Democracy, Democracy in America, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, William F. Byrne|

An excerpt from Democracy in America. I had remarked during my stay in the United States that a democratic state of society, similar to that of the Americans, might offer singular facilities for the establishment of despotism; and I perceived, upon my return to Europe, how much use had already been made, by most of [...]

A Tale of Two Cités: Mediating Associations

By |2013-11-21T14:40:35-06:00January 23rd, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Barack Obama, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Politics, Robert Nisbet|Tags: , |

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. But what is “best” for some is “worst” for others, and vice-versa. Monday, President Obama was sworn in for his second term. This event was a “best” for his stalwart supporters, such as Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, and is a sign of a [...]

Living Conservatism: Burke and Tocqueville

By |2013-11-21T11:41:11-06:00January 7th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Books, Bruce Frohnen, Conservatism, Edmund Burke|Tags: |

Virtue and the Promise of Conservatism: the Legacy of Burke and Tocqueville, by Bruce Frohnen. Conservatism lives. It continues to exercise its power over bright young minds. It also shows us a way of life, how to live. For these assertions there could be no better evidence than Bruce Frohnen’s Virtue and the Promise of Conservatism. Conceived [...]

The Federal Idea

By |2021-05-05T13:12:50-05:00January 5th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, Federalist Papers, Political Philosophy, Politics, St. John's College, Wilfred McClay|

The concept of federalism has been one of the principal casualties of modern American history. One has to look far and wide to find American historians and political scientists who do not believe, with the smugness and tenacity of dogma, that our federal institutions are lumbering relics of a past we outgrew over a century [...]

The State of American Liberal Education These Days

By |2014-03-19T17:37:58-05:00January 4th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy, Democracy in America, Liberal Learning, Peter A. Lawler|Tags: |

What are the ends of education? We mean, of course, the ends for us, for us democratic Americans. So we begin with the best book ever written on democracy and the best book ever written on America—Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America. America, Tocqueville noticed, is an overwhelmingly middle-class country. To be middle class, of [...]

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