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BOOKS: Conserving Russell Kirk
By Peter Berkowitz
Peter Berkowitz on The Essential Russell Kirk: Selected Essays edited by George A Panichas
George A. Panichas, Ed. The Essential Russell Kirk:
Selected Essays. ISI Books. 640 pages. $20.00
Conservatism
in general, and in particular the social or traditionalist
conservatism reclaimed by the extraordinary lifelong labors of
Russell Kirk (1918–1994), counsels that dominant opinion should serve as a
starting point for serious inquiry. Dominant opinion in the United
States today, at least among the intellectual class, is progressive
opinion. And according to progressive opinion, contemporary
conservatism is in crisis.
The progressives’
current diagnosis
demonstrates an
illiberal failure to
comprehend the
moral intentions and
structural features
of American
conservatism.
Certainly conservatism faces many challenges:
It has come to be associated in the public mind with naïve
efforts to promote democracy abroad by force of arms; it must deal
with serious disagreement within its ranks about the justice of,
and government role in, abortion, embryonic stem cell research,
same-sex marriage, and euthanasia; and it confronts a society and
popular culture that continues to drift leftward (as liberal
society has steadily done since more or less the time of Locke) in
celebrating not only the rights of the individual against the state
(with health exceptions for seat belts, smoking, and transfats),
but also the authority of the individual against tradition,
community, and family. Yet the progressives’ current
diagnosis, or rather denunciation, demonstrates an illiberal
failure to comprehend the moral intentions and structural features
of American conservatism while obscuring conservatism’s
fundamental convictions and long-term prospects.
The most dramatic recent example of
denunciation disguised as diagnosis appeared over the summer in a
review in the New Republicof The Essential Russell
Kirk by Boston College professor Alan
Wolfe. In “Contempt,” Wolfe argued that Kirk’s
conservatism is “provincial, resentful, bigoted.”
Indeed, “If you collected all the grumblings in a small-town
drugstore by men convinced that somehow the world had passed them
by, and then added a few literary and historical references,”
writes Wolfe, “you would have The
Essential Russell Kirk.”
This is a bizarre description. Far from a
provincial, Kirk traveled widely through Britain and Europe and the
United States and wrote extensively about his travels. Although he
never settled on a campus as a tenured professor, he earned a Ph.D.
as a young man, lectured and taught at a diversity of colleges and
universities throughout his life, and collected 12 honorary doctorates. He was
the author of some 30 books, mostly learned but also including works of
popular fiction, and in addition wrote prolifically for newspapers
and magazines. And Kirk’s collected writings extend far and
wide. They explore the fundamental tenets of conservatism and
liberalism; the religious foundations of Western civilization and
the principles of order that structure it; the dependence of
politics on the moral imagination; the dangers to modern man of
ideology; the paramount importance of liberal education; and the
origin and development of conservative thought in America.
Wolfe lodges three large criticisms against
Kirk. The first is that Kirk’s critique of ideology is
peculiar and self-serving, because it holds that only liberals can
be ideological. To make this criticism stick, Wolfe must labor to
obscure Kirk’s conception of ideology and of conservatism.
It is generally accepted that since the
nineteenth century, ideology has been understood to refer to a
comprehensive system of ideas for organizing moral and political
life that claims the authority of reason and objective analysis but
in reality is rooted in interest and prejudice. No doubt that in
defining ideology as a form of “political fanaticism”
that is committed to “the belief that this world of ours may
be converted into the Terrestrial Paradise through the operation of
positive law and positive planning,” Kirk gives it a Burkean
twist. But he certainly did not mean that no person or party to the
right of center could fall prey to ideology. Rather, his argument
was that Edmund Burke represented the epitome of the conservative
mind. In the French Revolutionaries’ attempt to radically
reorganize political life in accordance with their novel theories
about man and society, Burke saw a destructive ambition. Against
it, he championed prudence, a form of reasoning grounded in
history, tradition, and experience, and relying not on abstract
patterns and general rules but on context-sensitive judgments. To
the extent that a conservative is one who makes prudence and not
some system of ideas his guide to politics, it is reasonable to say
that conservative politics and ideological politics are opposites.
It is also reasonable to acknowledge that many on the right,
departing from conservative principles, fall prey to ideology. One
can, of course, debate whether Kirk was correct to identify the
essence of conservatism with Burke, but his doing so, and the
critique of ideology that flows from it, are, contrary to Wolfe,
more than respectable.
Burke championed
prudence, a form of
reasoning grounded in
history, tradition, and
experience, relying not
on abstract patterns
and general rules but
on context-sensitive
judgments.
Second, Wolfe accuses Kirk of propounding a
trite and incoherent defense of religion. Since Kirk believed that
the practice of religion is critical to social order and
civilization, he was obliged, Wolfe insists, to identify the one
true religion — say Judaism, Catholicism, evangelical
Protestantism, or some form of American civil religion — and
defend it to the hilt. Having failed to do that, Kirk is left with
nothing but “a denunciation of everything that we modern
people do without any convincing account of how anything could be
done differently.”
Wolfe argues as if the only legitimate
conservative critique of contemporary religious practice and
opinion is a radical one. If conservatives are serious and
thoughtful about their religious faith, then, he insists, they must
be unflinching in their devotion to it, and unflinching devotion
requires them to demand the imposition of their faith on the public
square.
But that is to impute to conservatives typical
progressive thoughtlessness about conservatism and religion. Faith
can coexist with doubt. Reverence for the variety of teachings and
moral discipline stemming from biblical religion are consistent
both with maintaining a critical stance toward biblical faith and
with a life-long quest to understand God’s order and its
implications for politics. Moreover, religious belief itself may
counsel against imposing religion in the public square. Contrary to
Wolfe, it is neither cliché nor contradictory for Kirk to
urge readers to return to the sources of biblical faith while
declining to undertake a full-scale defense of any particular
Christian denomination. What Wolfe objects to in Kirk’s
writings on religion, and attempts to recast as vice, are qualities
officially — and rightly — celebrated by liberals:
moderation and tolerance, openness to mystery and doubt, and
appreciation of the claims of competing sects, denominations,
schools, and traditions.
What Wolfe objects
to in Kirk’s writings
on religion are
qualities officially
celebrated by liberals:
moderation and
tolerance and
openness to mystery
and doubt.
Third, Wolfe condemns Kirk for his adulation of
the American founders. Kirk’s views on religion and politics
should have compelled him, insists Wolfe, to revile the founders,
who took their bearings from Locke and the liberal tradition.
Surely, Wolfe contends, the Constitution, which repudiates the
political role of religion by separating church and state, is
responsible for the decline of religious faith that Kirk laments.
To Wolfe’s disgust, Kirk stands by the Constitution as well
as the founders. Kirk’s failure to denounce the Constitution
is particularly egregious in Wolfe’s eyes given that
“Kirk’s hero Burke insisted that order required an
established church.” But instead of faulting the founders for
failing to establish a church, Kirk argues that the Constitution
“was to be a practical instrument of government, not a work
of political-religious dogma.” In Kirk’s embrace of the
Constitution and its commitment to separating church and state,
Wolfe discovers “dishonest thinking at its most
repellent.”
To convict Kirk of repellent dishonesty,
however, Wolfe must obscure the historical record and advance
defective arguments. He appears to be unaware of the scholarship
over the last several decades, including the writings of John Dunn
and Charles Taylor, exploring the Christian framework of thought
influencing John Locke’s writings on morals and politics. Nor
does he appreciate the voluminous scholarly literature on the
Christian dimensions of early American social and political
thought. Wolfe may be right that Kirk fails to recognize the extent
to which the Constitution itself brought into existence a way of
life that elevated liberty over piety, and so paved the way for the
liberal decadence that Kirk deplores. Nevertheless, contrary to
Wolfe, Kirk is on solid ground in arguing that the Constitution is
a document that aims to protect religious faith while recognizing
the claims of liberty and democracy. Indeed, while there are
familiar secular reasons for separating church and state, the
separation also derives support from Christian thinking about how
best to protect religion, as legal historian Mark DeWolfe Howe
convincingly argued more than 30
years ago in The Garden
and the Wilderness.
Furthermore, it is wrong to argue that since
Burke defended an established church, Kirk was obliged to repudiate
the founders because they rejected an established church.
Admiration for an author does not require one to follow him
slavishly in every respect. In fact, nothing could be less Burkean,
given the importance Burke attached to the role of custom,
tradition, and local context in applying principle to concrete
circumstances. And finally, does Wolfe think that it was
“dishonest thinking at its most repellent” for George
Washington, who presided over the Constitutional Convention in
Philadelphia in the summer of 1787, and who undoubtedly conceived of the Constitution
as a “practical instrument of government,” to have
famously declared in 1796 in his Farewell Address that, “Of all the
dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity,
religion and morality are indispensable supports”? If
Washington can consistently hold that religion is a critical
support of a constitutional order that separates church and state
— and, like Madison, Burke, and Tocqueville, he can —
why can’t Kirk also do so without incurring Wolfe’s
wrath?
Our liberty under
law is nourished
not by one but
by three great
traditions — the
biblical, the
classical, and the
tradition of modern
constitutionalism.
In conclusion, Wolfe rebukes Kirk for asserting
that in The Liberal Imagination
(1950) Lionel Trilling “found the liberal imagination
nearly bankrupt.” To which Wolfe replies, “Oh really?
What Trilling actually wrote was that ‘liberalism is not only
the dominant but the sole intellectual tradition’ in the
United States.” This would be a devastating reply to Kirk if
the liberal intellectual tradition were synonymous with the liberal
imagination, which it is not. Moreover, the major point of
Trilling’s great preface (from whose first page Wolfe quotes)
was, much as Kirk wrote, that liberalism, driven by the demands for
ever greater individual freedom and greater rational control of
human affairs, “drifts toward a denial of the emotions and
the imagination.”
To deliver the coup de grace, Wolfe employs a
truncated version of Trilling’s oft-quoted observation that
in his day conservative impulses were not expressing themselves in
ideas but rather “in actions or irritable mental gestures
which seek to resemble ideas.” “A better description of
Russell Kirk and his view of the world,” declares Wolfe,
“could not have been written.” Never mind that Trilling
published The Liberal Imagination not only before the renewal of the American
conservative tradition which Kirk led but before Kirk had published
his first book. More important, to enlist Trilling in such a
denunciation shows either a gross misunderstanding or willful
disregard of Trilling’s intention.
Trilling’s intention
was to wake up
sleepy and dogmatic
liberals by
impressing upon
them the need to
study conservative
thought.
Trilling’s intention was to wake up
sleepy and dogmatic liberals by impressing upon them the need to
study conservative thought. Writing at a time which, unlike our
own, lacked a vibrant conservative intellectual tradition, Trilling
lamented that “it is not conducive to the real strength of
liberalism that it should occupy the intellectual field
alone.” Invoking John Stuart Mill, who insisted on his
profound debt to the conservative mind of Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
Trilling contended that the encounter with conservative thought
“would force liberals to examine their position for its
weaknesses and complacencies.” Indeed, “a criticism
which has at heart the interests of liberalism might find its most
useful work not in confirming liberalism in its sense of general
rightness but rather in putting under some degree of pressure the
liberal ideas and assumptions of the present time.” It
follows that in the encounter with conservative thought — not
with conservative policy positions or electoral politics, where
polemics and partisanship are to be expected —
liberalism’s interests are served by a sympathetic rendering
of those features, priorities, and perspectives that distinguish
the conservative mind.
What
might a liberal who takes to heart the
interests of liberalism — to say nothing of conservatives who
wish to renew their appreciation of the spirit of conservatism
— learn from Kirk? One could do worse than to start with
Kirk’s own self-description, found in the title to his
autobiographical Confessions of a
Bohemian Tory (1963):
A Tory, according to Samuel Johnson, is a man
attached to orthodoxy in church and state. A bohemian is a
wandering and often impecunious man of letters or arts, indifferent
to the demands of bourgeois fad and foible. Such a one has your
servant been. Tory and bohemian go not ill together; it is quite
possible to abide by the norms of civilized existence, what Mr. T.
S. Eliot calls “the permanent things”; and yet to set
at defiance the soft security and sham conventionalities of
twentieth century sociability.
To see through contemporary practice and find
not anarchy or nihilism but venerable traditions and permanent
standards of civilized existence is a hallmark of Kirk’s
conservatism. Despite the great gap he discerned between how the
majority of Americans live and how we ought to live, Kirk had
modest expectations concerning social and political reform, because
change always carries a considerable risk of making things worse.
And whatever its other faults, America protected liberty, which was
a precondition for human dignity, and so a paramount good and a
priority to conserve.
With the exception of his unflinching critique
of communism, there is next to no discussion of contemporary policy
or electoral politics in the 600 pages of eclectic and elegantly woven essays that
constitute The Essential Russell Kirk. But Kirk’s focus on ideas cannot be reduced
to the lack of a “convincing account of how anything could be
done differently.” Wolfe’s suppressed assumption is
that in the face of sweeping social and political criticism the
only things worth doing differently are political in the narrow
sense. Kirk rejected that assumption. Instead, he believed that the
most urgent task consisted in educating hearts and minds through
the recovery and renewal of neglected sources of wisdom.
This education is what liberals — and
conservatives too — can gain from Kirk. It consists in
appreciating first that liberty and tradition are not antitheses
but mutually dependent goods. It involves understanding that our
liberty under law is nourished not by one but by three great
traditions — the biblical, the classical, and the tradition
of modern constitutionalism — and that, notwithstanding the
tensions among them, the defense of our freedom requires study of
all three, and the preservation of what is best in them. It directs
attention to literature, which enlarges our imagination and fosters
an appreciation of the mystery, diversity, and complexity of human
affairs, and in particular to the high modernism epitomized by the
work of T.S. Eliot, which finds in the maladies of modernity an
opportunity to reclaim forgotten teachings about “the
permanent things.” It places liberal education at the heart
of civic education, and not the other way around, because knowledge
of literature, history, philosophy, religion, and science prepares
students for freedom by opening their eyes, invigorating their
hearts, and furnishing and refining their minds. And finally, it
extols moderation, which is prior to and presupposed by prudence.
Moderation is the virtue which, among other things, controls
partisan passions and allows us to recognize and give their proper
due to the variety of goods we confront. Not least among the goods
that moderation enables us to balance are the progressive and
conservative strands in the American political tradition.
Kirk
made his mistakes, and his writings
betray blind spots. He does not wrestle with the entanglement of
nineteenth-century American conservatism with slavery. He does not
often give progress its due. And at times he underestimates how the
individual liberty that he wished to conserve corrodes the very
sentiments, traditions, and principles that provide, in his
judgment, liberty’s greatest justification and support. These
are real problems, and
critics should confront them directly. And yet
“a criticism which has at heart the interests of
liberalism,” cannot begin and end with Kirk’s errors, much
less wildly exaggerate his errors and invent vices and sins of which he
is not guilty.
Kirk’s defense of “the permanent
things” merits a defense in no small measure because of the
role the permanent things play in sustaining liberty.
Peter Berkowitz is the Tad and
Dianne Taube Senior Fellow at
Stanford’s Hoover Institution, and
teaches at George Mason University
School of Law. His writings are posted
at www.PeterBerkowitz.com.
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