Shipping Charge

By |2014-01-24T10:25:25-06:00December 6th, 2012|Categories: Friendship, Modernity, Peter Blum, Poetry|

That “friend” is now so widely verbified Online (I friended someone new just now) Calls friendship into some degree of question Does it not? Perhaps “that ship has sailed”? And does this not imply a shipping charge If ship is also verb instead of noun? But even online friends who seem asea There being a [...]

Modernism & Conservatism: Does the culture of “The Waste Land” lead to freedom—or something more?

By |2014-01-21T12:51:53-06:00November 26th, 2012|Categories: Conservatism, Film, Modernity, T.S. Eliot|Tags: , |

Nearly 30 years before he shocked National Review by endorsing Barack Obama for president, senior editor Jeffery Hart announced a divorce of a different kind from the American right. With “The Intelligent Woman’s Guide to a Modern American Conservatism”—published in The New Right Papers in 1982 and previewed in NR a few months earlier—Hart split [...]

The Roots of Modernity in Perversions of Christianity

By |2023-05-21T11:32:09-05:00November 18th, 2012|Categories: E.B., Eva Brann, Liberal Learning, Modernity, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

The part of the title of this talk which I asked to have announced is “The Roots of Modernity.” But there is a second part which I wanted to tell you myself. The full title is: “The Roots of Modernity in Perversions of Christianity.” The reason I wanted to tell you myself is that it [...]

Decadence and Its Critics

By |2018-05-29T12:16:59-05:00November 14th, 2012|Categories: Culture, Featured, Gleaves Whitney, Modernity, Western Civilization|Tags: , |

Through the ages the death of civilizations, no less than the death of human beings, has fascinated unnumbered observers of the human condition. For those who seek examples of civilization’s perdurability, the historical record is not reassuring. After all, what is Sumeria today but eroding ziggurats on the plain of Shinar? What remains of the [...]

T.E. Hulme: The First Conservative of the Twentieth Century

By |2020-09-15T15:36:47-05:00July 30th, 2010|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christian Humanism, Conservatism, Culture, Modernity, T.E. Hulme, T.S. Eliot|

History should never have forgotten T.E. Hulme, and we would do well to remember him and what he wrote. Indeed, the German shell that took his life in the early autumn of 1917 might have changed a considerable part of the twentieth century by removing Hulme from it. Our whole “Time of Troubles” as Kirk [...]

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