A World after Liberalism: Five Thinkers Who Inspired the Radical Right

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Yale University Press, 2021 M08 3 - 208 pages

A bracing account of liberalism’s most radical critics, introducing one of the most controversial movements of the twentieth century


In this eye-opening book, Matthew Rose introduces us to one of the most controversial intellectual movements of the twentieth century, the “radical right,” and discusses its adherents’ different attempts to imagine political societies after the death or decline of liberalism. Questioning democracy’s most basic norms and practices, these critics rejected ideas about human equality, minority rights, religious toleration, and cultural pluralism not out of implicit biases, but out of explicit principle. They disagree profoundly on race, religion, economics, and political strategy, but they all agree that a postliberal political life will soon be possible.


Focusing on the work of Oswald Spengler, Julius Evola, Francis Parker Yockey, Alain de Benoist, and Samuel Francis, Rose shows how such thinkers are animated by religious aspirations and anxieties that are ultimately in tension with Christian teachings and the secular values those teachings birthed in modernity.

 

Contents

After Liberalism
1
The Prophet
18
The Fantasist
39
The AntiSemite
64
The Pagan
87
The Nationalist
111
The Christian Question
136
Notes
159
Bibliography
181
Index
193
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About the author (2021)

Matthew Rose is director of the Barry Center on the University and Intellectual Life at the Morningside Institute.

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