Tag: literature
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September 11, 2010 Dominique Venner
Homer: The European Bible, Part 3
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September 11, 2010 H. P. Lovecraft
The Racial Worldview of H. P. Lovecraft, Part 3
Ed. A. Trumbo
Editor’s Note:
Chalk-white Nordicks, Imperial Romans, and Hercynian Woods, are but a few of the topics touched upon in this Lovecraft letter. It contains a collection of thoughts founded more on fantasy than fact, but very interesting thoughts nonetheless. (more…)
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Ed. A. Trumbo
Editor’s Note:
Lovecraft had a rather unbecoming tendency to judge other branches of the Indo-Aryan racial family from a very chauvinist, Imperial, pro-English perspective. (more…)
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2,212 words
In saner times our great poets, writers, and philosophers expressed the feelings and ideas which came naturally from the race-soul. In these times those feelings and ideas are too “controversial” to be expressed freely, so where they cannot be suppressed outright, they are reinterpreted, obscured, and selectively anthologized by the alien arbiters of our culture. For no poet of our race has this been more true than for William Butler Yeats.
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September 9, 2010 H. P. Lovecraft
The Racial Worldview of H. P. Lovecraft, Part 1
Edited by A. Trumbo
Editor’s Note:
The purpose of these writings is to provide a genuine look into the racial Weltanschauung of Howard Phillips Lovecraft (1890–1937). I have drawn my data from the five volumes of The Selected Letters 0f H. P. Lovecraft, published by Arkham House in 1965. (more…)
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Translated by Greg Johnson
Part 1 of 3
François Julien, one of the most acute minds of our time, recalled:
When I was in school, people called me and a friend “the Homerists” . . . (more…)
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1,350 words
Editor’s Note:
This article is from National Vanguard, March 1984. The author is not credited, but it is almost certainly William Pierce. (more…)
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John Wyndham
The Chrysalids
London: Michael Joseph, 1955I am a child of the Cold War, so good post-apocalyptic fiction, particularly that involving the world after thermonuclear holocaust, resonates with me. An example I recently enjoyed was The Chrysalids by apocalyptic Science Fiction author John Wyndham, also known for The Day of the Triffids, The Kraken Wakes, and The Midwich Cuckoos.
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Translations: Czech, Portuguese
To many of his admirers, the scariest things H. P. Lovecraft wrote were not about Cthulhu, they were about politics. But, as I hope to show, the politics of this master of looming, irrational, metaphysical horror are solidly grounded in reality and reason.
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This is always difficult to assess, but from this distance three different spear-points become discernible through the mist.
The first is an obvious desire for self-expression–yet, as always, the nihilism of Samuel Beckett needs to be avoided, where, during one part of the Trilogy, such as Molloy, he declares: nothing to express, no need to express, a blinding desire to stain the silence. I think that the aporia whereby post-modernism eats itself needs to be avoided.
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August 9, 2010 Mark Deavin
Henry Williamson: Nature’s Visionary
The fact that the name of Henry Williamson is today so little known across the White world is a sad reflection of the extent to which Western man has allowed himself to be deprived of his culture and identity over the last 50 years. Until the Second World War Williamson was generally regarded as one of the great English Nature writers, possessing a unique ability to capture the essential essence and meaning of the natural world in all its variety and forms.