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Mr. Conservatism


Article # : 11747 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 4 / 1987  3,023 Words
Author : W . Wesley McDonald
W. Wesley McDonald is associate professor of political science at Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania. He is currently completing a study of the political thought of Russell Kirk to be published by the National Humanities Institute, Washington, D.C.

       THE CONSERVATIVE MIND
       From Burke to Eliot
       Seventh Revised Edition
       Russell Kirk
       Chicago-Washington, D.C.: Regnery Books, 1986
       535 pp., $19.95
       
       THE WISE MEN KNOW WHAT WICKED THINGS
       ARE WRITTED ON THE SKY
       Russell Kirk
       Chicago-Washington, D.C.: Regnery Books
       1987
       
        Shortly after his 1980 landslide victory, the first self-proclaimed conservative president in American history saluted Russell Kirk's contribution to the American conservative movement. As one of the conservative "intellectual leaders" who "shaped so much of our thought," Kirk, President Reagan proclaimed, at the Conservative Action Conference in Washington, D.C., "has helped renew a generation's interest and knowledge of these 'true ideas,' these 'permanent things,' which are the underpinnings and the intellectual infrastructure of the conservative revival in our nation. The values and ancient truths of our civilization have been the focus of his powerful intellect in such major works as The Conservative Mind and The Roots of American Order."
       
        The publication of Kirk's second and most enduring book in 1953, The Conservative Mind, "contributed through the power of the word," Kirk writes in the foreword to this latest edition, "to a large political movement in America...which, within a few years, would supplant in power America's latter-day liberalism." He refers here to the strength of liberalism as an ideological force. Twenty-seven years would pass before the movement of ideas this book helped inspire would lead to significant conservative political victories. Yet such is to be expected, given that in "the United States, as in Britain," as he has observed elsewhere, "the passage of some three decades is required for a body of convictions to be expressed, discussed, and at last incorporated in public policy." Now that this period of gestation has passed, the shaping role of Kirk's principles upon the substance and direction of the intellectual content of the postwar conservative movement bears reexamination.
       
        Born in Plymouth, Michigan, this son of a railroad engineer was only thirty-five when he completed The Conservative Mind. In the next five years,
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