A Paleoconservative Anthology: New Voices for an Old Tradition: Political Theory for Today
Editat de Paul Gottfried Contribuţii de Wayne Allensworth, David Azerrad, Mark G. Brennan, C. Jay Engel, Pedro Gonzalez, Grant Havers, Carl F. Horowitz, Stephen B. Presser, Keith Preston, Alexander Riley, Joseph Scotchie, William J. Watkins Jr.en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 feb 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781666919721
ISBN-10: 1666919721
Pagini: 210
Dimensiuni: 158 x 237 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Political Theory for Today
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1666919721
Pagini: 210
Dimensiuni: 158 x 237 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Political Theory for Today
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: What Conservatives Could Learn from Paleoconservatives by David Azerrad
Chapter 2: Revisiting the Clash between Neoconservatives and Paleoconservatives by Keith Preston
Chapter 3: Sam Francis: A Foundational Thinker of the Right by Pedro Gonzalez
Chapter 4: Jeffersonian Constitutionalism: The Heart of Paleoconservative Legal Theory by Williams J. Watkins
Chapter 5: Paleoconservative Jurisprudence by Stephen B Presser
Chapter 6: The Triumph of the Political: Post-Libertarianism at the End of the American Ideology by C. Jay Engel
Chapter 7: Richard Weaver and The South by Joseph Scotchie
Chapter 8: A Paleoconservative Dialectic by Grant Havers
Chapter 9: Human Nature: A Biosocial View by Alexander Riley
Chapter 10: How Conservatives Should Practice the Historian's Craft by Mark J. Brennan
Chapter 11: Myth of the Reagan Revolution by Carl F Horowitz
Chapter 12: Rethinking "National Security" by Wayne Allensworth
About the Contributors
Introduction
Chapter 1: What Conservatives Could Learn from Paleoconservatives by David Azerrad
Chapter 2: Revisiting the Clash between Neoconservatives and Paleoconservatives by Keith Preston
Chapter 3: Sam Francis: A Foundational Thinker of the Right by Pedro Gonzalez
Chapter 4: Jeffersonian Constitutionalism: The Heart of Paleoconservative Legal Theory by Williams J. Watkins
Chapter 5: Paleoconservative Jurisprudence by Stephen B Presser
Chapter 6: The Triumph of the Political: Post-Libertarianism at the End of the American Ideology by C. Jay Engel
Chapter 7: Richard Weaver and The South by Joseph Scotchie
Chapter 8: A Paleoconservative Dialectic by Grant Havers
Chapter 9: Human Nature: A Biosocial View by Alexander Riley
Chapter 10: How Conservatives Should Practice the Historian's Craft by Mark J. Brennan
Chapter 11: Myth of the Reagan Revolution by Carl F Horowitz
Chapter 12: Rethinking "National Security" by Wayne Allensworth
About the Contributors
Recenzii
Edited by the distinguished historian who coined the term "paleoconservatism" for a loosely defined camp of Old Right (as opposed to "neoconservative") thinkers, this book brings together essays by thoughtful and independently-minded members of a younger generation of that persuasion. While acknowledging their debt to their predecessors, they are less resigned to the decline of the West and inclined to place greater emphasis on the realities and importance of political power.
---Lee Congdon, author of George Kennan for Our Time.
Finally, students, academics, and concerned citizens can read a full-throated, scholarly defense of paleoconservatism. The dean of paleoconservatism, Paul Gottfried, has assembled essays by prominent writers on the work of those who pioneered the study of the cultural roots of popular self-rule in America and their endangerment by a managerial class. Love it, hate it, or even fear some of what it contains, this book is essential for understanding a rigorous, coherent body of thought crucial to the development of and debates within American conservatism.
In A Paleoconservative Anthology, Paul Gottfried has ably introduced what paleoconservatism is, what it is not, and something of the nature of the ofttimes feisty debates allied intellectuals frequently have among themselves. The contributors cover subjects that range from the sociologist Alexander Riley's forcible demolition of the progressive view regarding human nature to defense consultant Wayne Allensworth's reassessment of US national security imperiled by the forces of globalization. Taken as a whole, these contributors do not mince words in what they consider the outrages of the modern world. Gottfried has assembled voices that are always interesting, frequently challenging, and occasionally superb.
---Lee Congdon, author of George Kennan for Our Time.
Finally, students, academics, and concerned citizens can read a full-throated, scholarly defense of paleoconservatism. The dean of paleoconservatism, Paul Gottfried, has assembled essays by prominent writers on the work of those who pioneered the study of the cultural roots of popular self-rule in America and their endangerment by a managerial class. Love it, hate it, or even fear some of what it contains, this book is essential for understanding a rigorous, coherent body of thought crucial to the development of and debates within American conservatism.
In A Paleoconservative Anthology, Paul Gottfried has ably introduced what paleoconservatism is, what it is not, and something of the nature of the ofttimes feisty debates allied intellectuals frequently have among themselves. The contributors cover subjects that range from the sociologist Alexander Riley's forcible demolition of the progressive view regarding human nature to defense consultant Wayne Allensworth's reassessment of US national security imperiled by the forces of globalization. Taken as a whole, these contributors do not mince words in what they consider the outrages of the modern world. Gottfried has assembled voices that are always interesting, frequently challenging, and occasionally superb.