“Democracy without private property is fundamentally unstable and will not survive,” says Mark Mitchell. But how to...
Intercollegiate Review
Providing college students with the best of intellectual conservatism by exploring the ideas and principles behind conservative philosophy, politics, and economics.
Why Civility Precedes the Social Contract
The internal restraints of manners and mores underpin the external restraints of law.
Robert B. Shaw and the Poetry of New England
A late and talented member of a long American poetic tradition.
Wes Anderson, Maturing Auteur
In “Asteroid City,” directorial control competes with the free play that gives life to cinema.
England’s Music Lost—and Found
Why didn’t the nineteenth century produce a British Beethoven—or a Handel, for that matter?
The America Africans Made
David Hackett Fischer says the transmission of African cultures to America is crucial to the “mix of many mixtures” of a...
Modern Illiteracy and Its Cure
Will the first internet generation be the death of our literary culture?
Jefferson’s Dynasty of Principle
An engaging account of the Jeffersonians in their own time and on their own terms.
Can You Trust Robert Kagan?
His new book reveals more by what it doesn’t say than by what it does.
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