Part One: 14:47, Part Two: 14:28, Part 3: 12:26
Tag: conservative revolution
-
London: Arktos, 2011
264 pagesonly in paperback: $20
[wp_eStore:product_id:90:end]
This is the story of the disaffected intellectual Iversen, who runs a small newspaper in Weimar Germany during the 1920s. (more…)
-
January 6, 2012 Robert Steuckers
Desafios Pós-modernos:
Entre Fausto & NarcisoTradução: para o inglês por Greg Johnson
[Para o português pela Equipe Yrminsul]Parte 1
-
October 11, 2011 Alain de Benoist
Листування Юнґера з Гайдеґґером
-
5,603 words
Translations: Portuguese, Spanish
From the viewpoint of racial nationalism, the musical genre known as Black Metal is one of the most significant popular culture phenomena of the last two decades. Yet it has been seldom discussed by politically congenial scholars and commentators. (more…)
-
April 6, 2011 Alain de Benoist
Ernst Jünger:
The Figure of The Worker Between the Gods & the Titans, Part 1Part 1 of 8
Translated by Greg Johnson
Portuguese translation here
Armin Mohler, author of the classic The Conservative Revolution in Germany, 1918–1932, wrote regarding Ernst Jünger’s The Worker (Der Arbeiter) and the first edition of The Adventurous Heart: “To this day, my hand cannot take up these works without trembling.” (more…)
-
December 15, 2010 Robert Steuckers
Postmodern Challenges:
Between Faust & Narcissus, Part 2 -
September 22, 2010 Robert Steuckers
Interview with Robert Steuckers
Troy Southgate: When and why did you decide to become involved in politics?
Robert Steuckers: I was never actually involved in politics, as I was never a member of a political party. Nevertheless I am a citizen interested in political questions but of course not in the usual plain and trivial way, as I have no intention to become a candidate, council deputy or Member of Parliament.
-
July 28, 2010 Alain de Benoist
The Jünger–Heidegger Correspondence
-
3,655 words
Translated by Greg Johnson
In his Pariser Tagebücher [Paris Diaries], Ernst Jünger refers to his meetings in German-occupied Paris with Pierre Drieu La Rochelle (for example on October 11th, 1941 and on April 7th, 1942). Drieu was then the editor in chief of La Nouvelle Revue française, published by Gallimard. (more…)
-
3,840 words
Translated by Greg Johnson
Ernst Jünger and Martin Heidegger engaged in a dialogue on nihilism in two texts published five years apart in the 1950s on the occasions of their respective sixtieth birthdays.[1] The study and comparison of these texts is particularly interesting because they allow us to appreciate what, on this fundamental subject, separates two authors who are frequently compared to each other and who maintained a powerful intellectual relationship for several decades. What follows is a brief overview.