Category: North American New Right
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March 21, 2011 Carl Schmitt
Carl Schmitt’s Land & Sea, Part 8
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40 words
Andrew Hamilton is one of our most versatile and consistently interesting writers. There are 25 pieces by him on this site. For a list, click here.
For the duration of this weekend, I have reopened commenting on his articles.
Enjoy!
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Editor’s Note:
The following is from Anthony M. Ludovici, Confessions of an Anti-Feminist: The Autobiography of Anthony M. Ludovici, ed. John V. Day, ch. 5, “My Education, Part III.” The book remains unpublished, but we hope to raise funds to finally bring it into print The notes by John V. Day are marked with his initials.
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1,011 words
Anthony Burgess
A Clockwork Orange
New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1962A Clockwork Orange is a short novella produced by Anthony Burgess in a very short period of time—yet the author had doubtless dwelt upon an entire zoology before producing it. One of the book’s characteristics, which even the most casual reader notices, is the experimental language or deliberate argot that Burgess develops for his retinue of juvenile delinquents. (more…)
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1,060 words
Editor’s Note:
The following text is from the Les Editions de La Reconquête reprint of the French edition of Louis-Ferdinand Céline’s Bagatelles pour un massacre, which is available from their website. I wish to thank the publisher for making this text available for translation.
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March 17, 2011 Carl Schmitt
Carl Schmitt’s Land & Sea, Part 7
Part 7 of 9
Translated by Simona Draghici, revised by Greg Johnson
Fourteen
Portuguese, Spaniards, Frenchmen, Dutchmen, and Englishmen fought one another for the division of the new Earth. The means, though, were not exclusively military; the struggle also entails diplomatic negotiations and suits for the best legal title.
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Kay S. Hymowitz
Manning Up: How the Rise of Women Has Turned Men into Boys
New York: Basic Books, 2011I expected this book to be a diatribe against the often-discussed “loser” men—those who, not having any marketable skill, are still living off their parents into mid-life. (more…)
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Part 3 of 3
The Role of Multiculturalism in the Globalist Agenda
Many nefarious aims have been imposed under the banner of multiculturalism and slogans such as “equality” and “human rights.” As “democracy” has been used to justify the bombing states throughout recent history, these slogans often serve as rhetoric to beguile the well-intentioned while hiding the aims of those motivated by little if anything other than power and greed.
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1,568 words
French translation here
Louis-Ferdinand Céline
Trifles for a Massacre
Trans. anonymous
Asunción, Paraguay: Les Editions de La Reconquête, 2010Louis-Ferdinand Céline (1894–1961) is my favorite writer I don’t enjoy reading, much as Vertigo is my favorite movie I don’t enjoy watching. (more…)