- Traditionalist Conservatism
Traditionalist conservatism, also known as "Burkean conservatism," "traditionalism," "cultural conservatism," "New Conservatism" (not to be confused with neoconservatism) or "classical conservatism" is that branch of conservative thought that is characterized by an adherence to the principles of
prescription (law) ,custom (law) ,social order ,hierarchy ,faith , the natural family, orderedliberty , andtradition . It may be said to have affinities withreactionary thought, and some adherents of this movement perhaps embrace that label, defying the stigma that has attached to it in Western culture since theEnlightenment .History of the "New Conservatives"
Traditionalist
conservatism emerged afterWorld War Two in the writings of a group of university professors (labeled the "New Conservatives" by the popular press of the time) who revived academic interest in the life and works of Anglo-Irish statesman and philosopherEdmund Burke and also called for a rejection of progressivism (modern liberalism ) and communism in philosophy and practical political policy.Traditionalists rebuked the progressive worldview inherent in an America comfortable with New Deal economics, a burgeoning military-industrial complex, and a consumerist and commercialized citizenry.
University of Chicago professorRichard M. Weaver was among the first of the New Conservatives and his Ideas Have Consequences (1948) chronicled the steady erosion of Western cultural values since the Middle Ages. ["The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America since 1945", George H. Nash, pp. 30-36, ISI Books, 2006] Weaver was joined in 1949 by Peter Viereck, whose Conservatism Revisited examined the conservative thought of Klemens Metternich.The 1950s brought a flowering of New Conservative thought with 1953's "The New Science of Politics" by
Eric Voegelin , 1953's "The Quest for Community" byRobert A. Nisbet , and 1955's "Conservatism in America" byClinton Rossiter . However, the book that defined the traditionalist school was 1953's "The Conservative Mind: From Burke to Eliot", written byRussell Kirk , which gave a detailed analysis of the intellectual pedigree of Anglo-American traditionalistconservatism . ["The Conservative Tradition in America", Charles W. Dunn, p. 10, Rowman & Littlefield, 2003]Other New Conservatives included John Blum,
Daniel Boorstin , McGeorge Bundy, Thomas Cook, Raymond English, John Hallowell, Anthony Harrigan, August Heckscher, Milton Hindus, Kelems von Klemperer,Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn , Richard Leopold, S. A. Lukacs, Malcolm Moos, Eliseo Vivas, Geoffrey Wagner, Chard Walsh, and Francis Wilson ["Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill", Peter Viereck, p. 107, Transaction Publishers, 1956, 2006] ) as well as Arthur Bestor,Mel Bradford , C. P. Ives,Stanley Jaki ,John Lukacs ,Forrest McDonald ,Thomas Molnar , Gerhard Neimeyer, James V. Schall, S.J., Peter J. Stanlis, Stephen J. Tonsor, and Frederick Wilhelmsen. ["The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America since 1945", George H. Nash, pp. 50-55, 68-73, ISI Books, 2006] An earlier group of individuals who had an influence on the New Conservatives were Herbert Agar, Bernard Iddings Bell, Gordon Keith Chalmers, Grenville Clark, Peter Drucker, Will Herberg, Ross J. S. Hoffman, Walter Lippmann, Dorothy Thompson, and Reinhold Niebuhr. ["Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill", Peter Viereck, p. 107, Transaction Publishers, 1956, 2006]Russell Kirk and the Six Canons of Conservatism
"The Conservative Mind" was written by Kirk as a doctoral dissertation while he was a student at the
St. Andrews University inScotland . Previously the author of a biography of American conservativeJohn Randolph of Roanoke , Kirk's "The Conservative Mind" had laid out six "canons of conservative thought" in the book, including:*1.) Belief that a divine intent rules society as well as conscience...Political problems, at bottom, are religious and moral problems.
*2.) Affection for the proliferating variety and mystery of traditional life, as distinguished from the narrowing uniformity and equalitarian and utilitarian aims of most radical systems.*3.) Conviction that civilized society requires orders and classes...
*4.) Persuasion that property and freedom are inseparably connected, and that economic leveling is not economic progress...
*5.) Faith in prescription and distrust of "sophisters and calculators." Man must put a control upon his will and his appetite...Tradition and sound prejudice provide checks upon man's anarchic impulse.
*6.) Recognition that change and reform are not identical... ["The Conservative Mind: From Burke to Eliot", Russell Kirk, pp. 7-8, Regnery, 1953]
Kirk goes on to examine the thought of a wide array of conservative thinkers, including Anglo-Irish statesman
Edmund Burke , American FederalistsJohn Adams andAlexander Hamilton , British literatiSamuel Taylor Coleridge andRobert Southey , Southern conservativesJohn Randolph of Roanoke ,John Calhoun , AmericanCatholic political thinkerOrestes Brownson ,New England writerNathaniel Hawthorne , British Prime MinisterBenjamin Disraeli , BritishCatholic John Henry Newman , American historianHenry Adams , theNew Humanism ofIrving Babbitt andPaul Elmer More , and Anglo-American poet and literary criticT. S. Eliot .Other Traditionalist Conservatives
Over time the New Conservatives gave way to a younger generation which took up the traditionalist mantle. Among this younger generation are included Jeremy Beer, editor of ISI Books, Thomas Bertonneau, visiting professor of English as SUNY-Oswego, Bradley J. Birzer, associate professor of history at
Hillsdale College , Cicero Bruce, assistant professor of English atSouthern Catholic College , George W. Carey, professor of government atGeorgetown University ,Allan Carlson , president of the Howard Center for Family, Religion, and Society, James Como, founder of the C. S. Lewis Society, Allan R. Crippen, II, founder of the John Jay Institute for Faith, Law, and Society, Ian Crowe and George H. Nash at the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal, Hugh Mercer Curtler, professor of philosophy atSouthwest Minnesota State University , Lee Edwards, professor of politics atCatholic University of America ,T. Kenneth Cribb, Jr. , president of theIntercollegiate Studies Institute , Michael P. Federici, professor of political science atMercyhurst College ,Bruce Frohnen ,associate professor of law atAve Maria School of Law ,Paul Gottfried , professor of humanities atElizabethtown College ,James Kurth and William Anthony Hay of theForeign Policy Research Institute , Mark C. Henrie, editor of the "Intercollegiate Review",E. Christian Kopff , professor of classics at theUniversity of Colorado, Boulder ,Peter Augustine Lawler , professor of government and international studies atBerry College , Daniel J. Mahoney, professor of politics atAssumption College , Mark G. Malvasi, professor of history atRandolph-Macon College , Wilfred M. McClay, professor of history at theUniversity of Tennessee, Chattanooga , W. Wesley McDonald, professor of political science atElizabethtown College , Jeffrey O. Nelson, president of theThomas More College of Liberal Arts (and Russell Kirk's son-in-law), James E. Person, Jr., Gerald J. Russello, editor of the "University Bookman",Claes G. Ryn , professor of politics atCatholic University of America , George A. Panichas, editor of "Modern Age ", Caleb Stegall, Ewa M. Thompson, professor of German and Slavic studies atRice University , John M. Vella, managing editor of "Modern Age ", the"Intercollegiate Review", and the "Political Science Reviewer",Gleaves Whitney ,Gregory Wolfe , the editor of "Image",R. V. Young , professor of English atNorth Carolina State University , and John Zmirak. ["American Conservatism: An Encyclopedia", Bruce Frohnen, Jeremy Beer, and Jeffrey O. Nelson, pp. 939-948, ISI Books, 2006] The names listed above are affiliated with theIntercollegiate Studies Institute and its publications or other traditionalist organizations and publications.Traditionalism is also associated with the thought of British philosopher
Roger Scruton and in practical British politics through the activities of theCornerstone Group .External links
Prominent Traditionalists
Russell Kirk Patrick J. Buchanan Eric Voegelin Peter Viereck Richard M. Weaver Robert A. Nisbet Clinton Rossiter Daniel Boorstin Forrest McDonald John Lukacs Stanley Jaki Mel Bradford Claes G. Ryn James Kurth R. V. Young T. Kenneth Cribb, Jr. Allan Carlson Bruce Frohnen Peter Augustine Lawler E. Christian Kopff Articles
* [http://www.newpantagruel.com/issues/2.2/understanding_traditionalist_c.php "Understanding Traditionalist Conservatism" by Mark C. Henrie]Traditionalist Educational Organizations
Center for the American Idea
* [http://www.imagejournal.org/crh/ The Center for Religious Humanism]
* [http://www.kirkcenter.org/burke/index.html The Edmund Burke Society]
* [http://www.artsci.lsu.edu/voegelin/ The Eric Voegelin Institute]
* [http://www.fpri.org/ The Foreign Policy Research Institute]
* [http://academic.shu.edu/chesterton/ The G. K. Chesterton Institute for Faith and Culture]
* [http://www.isi.org/ The Intercollegiate Studies Institute]
* [http://www.nhinet.org/ The National Humanities Institute]
* [http://www.kirkcenter.org/ The Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal]Traditionalist Political Organizations
* [http://cornerstonegroup.wordpress.com/ The Cornerstone Group]
* [http://www.johnjayinstitute.org/ The John Jay Institute for Faith, Society, and Law]Traditionalist Publications
* [http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/ "Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture"]
* [http://www.amconmag.com/ "The American Conservative"]
* [http://academic.shu.edu/chesterton/chestertonreview.htm "The Chesterton Review"]
* [http://www.americanidea.org/continuity/ "Continuity"]
* [http://www.nhinet.org/hum.htm "Humanitas"]
* [http://www.imagejournal.org/ "
]
* [http://www.isi.org/journals/intercollegiate_review.html "The Intercollegiate Review: A Journal of Scholarship and Opinion"]
* [http://www.isi.org/journals/modern_age.html "Modern Age: A Quarterly Review"]
* [http://www.fpri.org/orbis/ "Orbis: A Journal of World Affairs"]
* [http://www.salisburyreview.co.uk/ "The Salisbury Review"]
* [http://www.secondspring.co.uk/ "Second Spring: A Journal of Faith and Culture"]
* [http://www.touchstonemag.com/ "Touchstone: A Journal of Mere Christianity"]
* [http://www.kirkcenter.org/index.php/bookman/ "The University Bookman"]
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