The Essential Russell Kirk: Selected Essays

The Essential Russell Kirk: Selected Essays

by Russell Kirk
The Essential Russell Kirk: Selected Essays

The Essential Russell Kirk: Selected Essays

by Russell Kirk

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Overview

As the author of The Conservative Mind and other seminal books, Russell Kirk is usually thought of as one of the American conservative political movement’s most important progenitors. But as this collection demonstrates, Kirk was perhaps at his best as an essayist. This volume also confirms that Kirk’s was principally a literary and historical conservatism that refused to fit the irreducible complexity of human experience to the requirements of any ideological straitjacket. With The Essential Russell Kirk, literary critic George A. Panichas captures the breadth and depth of Kirk’s intellectual project by gathering together forty-four of the most masterful of Kirk’s essays, along with a unique chronology told in Kirk’s own words and a substantial introduction that articulates the deep humanism that animated Kirk’s philosophy. The result is a carefully assembled volume that gives us a fuller picture of an extraordinary man and writer, one whose labors had, and continue to have, remarkable repercussions on the American literary and political landscape.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781684516148
Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing
Publication date: 07/04/2023
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 525
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Russell Kirk (1918-1994), the father of intellectual conservatism in America, was the author of more than thirty books, including The Conservative Mind, Eliot and His Age, and The Roots of American Order. His legacy lives on in the work of the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal, based at his ancestral home in Mecosta, Michigan.

Table of Contents


Preface     XI
Russell Amos Kirk: A Composite Chronicle     XXVII
A Note on the Text     XLVII
The Idea of Conservatism
What Is Conservatism?     4
The Dissolution of Liberalism     23
Ten Exemplary Conservatives     32
Why I Am a Conservative     42
Our Sacred Patrimony
The Law and the Prophets     50
What Did Americans Inherit from the Ancients?     80
The Light of the Middle Ages     91
Civilization Without Religion?     106
The Rarity of the God-Fearing Man     115
The Necessity for a General Culture     124
Principles of Order
Edmund Burke: A Revolution of Theoretic Dogma     138
The Prescience of Tocqueville     154
T. S. Eliot's Permanent Things     166
Eric Voegelin's Normative Labor     176
The Moral Imagination
The Moral Imagination     206
Normative Art and Modern Vices     219
A Cautionary Note on the Ghostly Tale     240
Who Knows George Gissing?     245
Wyndham Lewis's First Principles     256
T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land     269
Places and People
Reflections of a Gothic Mind     286
Eigg, in theHebrides     305
A House in Mountjoy Square     319
The Architecture of Servitude and Boredom     324
Criminal Character and Mercy     334
The Drug of Ideology
The Drug of Ideology     348
The Errors of Ideology     365
Libertarians: Chirping Sectaries     373
Can Virtue Be Taught?     383
Decadence and Renewal in Education
The Conservative Purpose of a Liberal Education     398
The American Scholar and the American Intellectual     408
The Intemperate Professor     418
Teaching Humane Literature in High Schools     434
The American Republic
The Framers: Not Philosophes but Gentlemen     450
The Constitution and the Antagonist World     461
John Randolph of Roanoke: The Planter-Statesman     472
Orestes Brownson and the Just Society     492
Woodrow Wilson and the Antagonist World     502
Conservators of Civilization
The Conservative Humanism of Irving Babbitt     514
Paul Elmer More on Justice and Faith     525
George Santayana Buries Liberalism     534
The Humane Economy of Wilhelm Ropke     543
Max Picard: A Man of Vision in Our Time     550
Epilogue: Is Life Worth Living?      561
Bibliography     567
Notes     575
Index     587
With Gratitude     641
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