Worth the Wait: Edmund Burke

By |2014-01-31T17:25:49-06:00January 12th, 2013|Categories: Books, Edmund Burke|Tags: , |

Edmund Burke: Volume 1, 1730-1784 by F. P. Lock, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998. Thomas Copeland, the editor of The Correspondence of Edmund Burke and a central figure in Burke’s twentieth-century revival, once observed that of all the books written about Burke the most important was the work never written: his “official biography.” Unfortunately for posterity, Burke’s literary [...]

Rhetoric and Ranting: Inspired by Richard Weaver

By |2016-08-03T10:37:19-05:00January 8th, 2013|Categories: Christendom, Conservatism, Featured, Poetry, Rhetoric, Richard Weaver, South|Tags: , |

Richard Weaver In his autobiography, The Education of Henry Adams (1907), Adams tells us that he was born into one world in the nineteenth century and lived on into another. Born in Quincy, Massachusetts, in 1838, he lived to see the emergent twentieth century—a world in which a secular Dynamo replaced Venus and the [...]

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 [...]

Teaching in an Age of Ideology: Eric Voegelin

By |2019-11-07T12:08:44-06:00January 6th, 2013|Categories: Education, Eric Voegelin, Ideology|Tags: |

In my last post about teaching in an age of ideology, I proposed that one needs to illuminate to students about how to live according to the true, the beautiful, and the good. Now what exactly constitutes these goods has elicited an array of different responses from some of the most prominent thinkers as teachers in this [...]

Sharing the gift of Imaginative Conservatism!

By |2016-11-04T19:19:04-05:00December 5th, 2012|Categories: The Imaginative Conservative, TIC, W. Winston Elliott III|

To our Friends in The Imaginative Conservative community: Do you frequent Facebook, Google+, Reddit, Tumblr, StumbleUpon or Twitter? Please share TIC with your friends and they will praise your name in song & dance with joy! Give the gift of Imaginative Conservatism! (Share buttons for each of these services are at the bottom of all [...]

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 [...]

Judgment of the Nations: Christopher Dawson

By |2016-08-03T10:37:22-05:00November 24th, 2012|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Featured|

I mentioned in an essay last week that it had been eleven years exactly since I’d read my first book by Christopher Dawson. That book, 1942’s Judgment of the Nations, remains my favorite of Dawson’s works. I spent the entire Thanksgiving break that year, 2001, reading Dawson. I had found the book at Hyde Brothers Books [...]

Just Beyond Our Grasp: Personal Reflections on Christian Humanism

By |2016-08-03T10:37:23-05:00November 16th, 2012|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Conservatism, J.R.R. Tolkien, Natural Law, Russell Kirk, Western Civilization|

Over the last decade and a half, as many readers of TIC have probably noted, I’ve had the blessed opportunity of researching and writing about Russell Kirk (1918-1994), generally agreed upon as the founder of post-war American conservatism. At first, I did this mostly as a hobby, having become intensely interested in Christian Humanism through [...]

The Sharpening of the Conservative Mind

By |2013-12-24T10:17:43-06:00November 16th, 2012|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Books, Bruce Frohnen, Conservatism, Edmund Burke|Tags: , |

Virtue and the Promise of Conservatism: The Legacy of Burke & Tocqueville, by Bruce Frohnen In his role as a professor of English literature, Thomas Howard sometimes gives his class a list of the following words: majesty, magnanimity, valor, courtesy, grace, chastity, virginity, nobility, splendor, ceremony, taboo, mystery, purity. The reaction he gets is quite [...]

Russell Kirk, please meet Edmund Burke

By |2014-01-05T20:40:50-06:00November 12th, 2012|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Edmund Burke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Libertarianism, Russell Kirk|

Not Chesterbelloc, but Bur-Kirk. [Dedicated to the genius and patience of Winston Elliott] In the fall of 1950, Russell Kirk turned the ripe old age of 32. He had been publishing articles and reviews (and soon his M.A. thesis on John Randolph of Roanoke through the University of Chicago) since 1936. Even during [...]

Making Modernity Human: Can Christian humanism redeem an age of ideology?

By |2016-02-12T15:28:36-06:00November 8th, 2012|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Irving Babbitt, J.R.R. Tolkien, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

Irving Babbitt, C. S. Lewis, Russell Kirk In a world agog with labels and categories we too often leave important ideas behind. With paleocons, traditionalists, neocons, Leocons, libertarians, classical liberals, anarcho-capitalists, distributists, and agrarians, the right can be as bad as the left in its fetish for classification. One group that defies easy [...]

Reflections on Edmund Burke, Capitalism, and the Mob

By |2014-01-15T14:04:07-06:00October 26th, 2012|Categories: Capitalism, Civilization, Conservatism, Edmund Burke|Tags: |

‘Mob’ is an interesting word because of its dual meaning.  It means not only ‘organized crime’, that is, a small group of men working corporately and criminally in their own self-interest, but it also means a large group of rancorous, disgruntled people rioting for special interests they share in common.  This irony is particularly interesting [...]

Democracy and Leadership: An American Classic

By |2015-02-17T22:41:16-06:00October 18th, 2012|Categories: Books, Claes Ryn, Irving Babbitt, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Leadership, Politics|Tags: |

Democracy and Leadership by Irving Babbitt. Foreword by Russell Kirk, Liberty Classics, 1979, 390 pp. The appearance of a new edition of Irving Babbitt’s Democracy and Leadership (first published in 1924) is one sign among many that interest in this controversial thinker is growing markedly. Several scholarly studies related to his work have been published [...]

Christopher Dawson and the Humility of the Liberal Arts

By |2021-07-06T10:50:56-05:00October 10th, 2012|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Featured, Liberal Learning|

One of the greatest Catholic intellects and writers of the twentieth century, Christopher Dawson (1889-1970), worried deeply about the ideological, political, and cultural crises of the western world during the entirety of his adult life. The root of the problem, Dawson had come to believe between the two world wars, was the fundamental decline in [...]

Go to Top