Richard Weaver’s Conservatism of Affirmation & Hope

By |2025-02-18T09:03:38-06:00February 17th, 2025|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, Ludwig van Beethoven, Plato, Relativism, Richard Weaver, South, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

Against a modern age that denied notions of meaning, purpose, and truth, Richard Weaver articulated a conservatism of hope and affirmation based on the Platonic-Christian heritage and its manifestation in the Amer­ican South. Richard Weaver reasoned it was the emergence of nominalism, the departure from Plato­nism and Christianity, which produced the intellectual heresies leading to [...]

Wendell Berry and Forgiveness

By |2024-12-13T11:42:20-06:00December 13th, 2024|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Christianity, New Polity, Southern Agrarians, Wendell Berry|

Yes, we must fight and struggle for the ideal, but in the end the ultimate answers lie in God’s atonement and love for us, and in our love and forgiveness for others who are just as implicated as we are. Wendell Berry is a bearer of that message in his books. I have a great [...]

The Year Washington (Almost) Canceled Thanksgiving

By |2024-11-27T13:03:37-06:00November 27th, 2024|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, History, Michael J. Connolly, Senior Contributors, Slavery, South, Thanksgiving|

The creation of Thanksgiving was no uncontested process but a fight emerging from antebellum crises over slavery and American nationalism. In November 1859, a Washington, DC alderman from Capitol Hill violently opposed the mayor’s request to declare a Thanksgiving public holiday. By this point, annual celebrations had become traditional and twenty-five governors already proclaimed the [...]

Edgar Allan Poe’s Literary War

By |2024-10-06T20:03:00-05:00October 6th, 2024|Categories: Edgar Allan Poe, History, Literature, South, Timeless Essays|

In his lifetime, Edgar Allan Poe’s renown lay primarily in his reputation as the foremost critic of the day. As a critic, he complained that four or five cliques controlled American literature by controlling the larger portion of the critical journals. Edgar Allan Poe secured a permanent place among world authors as father of the [...]

Clyde Wilson’s “Jeffersonian Conservative Tradition” Revisited

By |2024-09-04T16:19:55-05:00September 4th, 2024|Categories: Clyde Wilson, Conservatism, History, South, Thomas Jefferson|

For Clyde Wilson, the Jeffersonian conservative tradition was never a stale embrace of the past for its own sake. It conserves only to produce something better. In 1969 the late Mel Bradford recommended to Modern Age’s second editor, Eugene Davidson, that he should publish a groundbreaking article by a young historian named Clyde Wilson. The [...]

A Pair of Moles: Robert Penn Warren & William Styron

By |2024-04-23T22:20:44-05:00April 23rd, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Literature, Modernity, Poetry, Robert Cheeks, South, Timeless Essays|Tags: , , |

The literature of Robert Penn Warren and William Styron describes the decline of society, an annihilation of culture. It also projects a knowledge of the eternal struggle, forever bound by memory, and the inherent yearning for a civilization that “is the refuge of sentiments and values, of spiritual congeniality, of belief in the word, of [...]

Bridging the North-South Divide: Jonathan Edwards and James Thornwell

By |2024-03-21T22:35:03-05:00March 21st, 2024|Categories: American Republic, American Revolution, Christianity, Civil War, History, Religion, South, Theology, Timeless Essays|

The narrative of a North-South divide in American History is a powerful, yet problematic one. However, closer metaphysical inspection of both regions uncovers a series of considerable similarities and ironic connections between the Puritans of New England fully embodied in Jonathan Edwards, and the Presbyterians of the Old South fully embodied in James Thornwell. Their [...]

The Bible as Agrarian Textbook

By |2024-02-27T20:06:17-06:00February 27th, 2024|Categories: Agrarianism, Bible, Economics, Political Economy, Ralph Ancil, Timeless Essays, Wilhelm Roepke|

Whether Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox or orthodox Protestant, the Bible is the basic book of the Christian faith. One may well ask if it has anything to say about how we should live, not only about the fruits of salvation, but about what kind of government we are to have or what kind of economy? [...]

Intrascendence, Myth, & the Southern Agrarian Legacy

By |2024-01-10T19:08:48-06:00January 10th, 2024|Categories: Agrarianism, Allen Tate, American Republic, Books, South|

There is more to Southern life than moonlight and magnolia. It presumed, in fact, an affection for the literal world justified by its origin, history, and destiny, infused with its own providentially given meaning and value. It was not a perfect society, to be sure. But it had at its core something which deserves respect. [...]

The Stand of Allen Tate

By |2023-10-06T06:40:58-05:00October 5th, 2023|Categories: Agrarianism, Allen Tate, South, Southern Agrarians|

“No society is worth ‘saving’ as such,” wrote Allen Tate (1899–1979). “What we must save is the truth of God and man, and the right society follows.”1 Such words are anathema to the secularists whose “progressive” theories have intoxicated the modern mind. Words of this kind are neither popular nor politically expedient in an age [...]

Wendell Berry’s “The Need to Be Whole”

By |2023-08-21T18:18:51-05:00August 21st, 2023|Categories: Agrarianism, Books, Civil War, South, Southern Agrarians, Wendell Berry|

More than ever, America is split between populist nationalism and left-wing internationalism, with little room in either ideology for anything like Wendell Berry's vision of local patriotic devotion. Whatever we make of his ruminations, with respect to this subject it is obviously the culture which has changed over the past few years, not him. The [...]

John Randolph of Roanoke & the Formation of a Southern Conservatism

By |2023-05-23T17:50:16-05:00May 23rd, 2023|Categories: American Founding, Civil Society, Conservatism, Economics, History, John Randolph of Roanoke, South, Timeless Essays|

John Randolph of Roanoke, one of the great exponents of the Southern political tradition, knew that what was proper to any state government was the preservation of the received order. The duty of the citizen of the commonwealth was to resist any legislative or constitutional changes to the received order, and to grant a broad [...]

“I’ll Take My Stand” as Southern Epic

By |2023-05-17T19:10:34-05:00May 17th, 2023|Categories: Agrarianism, Books, South, Timeless Essays|

Ever since the first stir they created in the early 1930s the Southern Agrarians have been difficult to assess. How serious, politically and economically, were they in what they advocated? How much agreement was there among them? The four collected above papers point up and even accentuate their divergence, investigating wide-ranging and, at least on [...]

M.E. Bradford’s Revolutionary “A Better Guide Than Reason”

By |2023-03-22T18:33:40-05:00March 22nd, 2023|Categories: Agrarianism, American Founding, American Republic, Books, John Dickinson, M. E. Bradford, Patrick Henry, South, Southern Agrarians, Thomas Jefferson, Timeless Essays|

No one who reads and digests “A Better Guide Than Reason” can fail to be revolutionized. We had thought that the great Southern political tradition—that of Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, John C. Calhoun, and the agrarians—was dead. Not so. A Better Guide Than Reason: Studies in the American Revolution by M.E. Bradford (241 pages, Sherwood Sugden [...]

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