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FEATURES: Modern Tomes
The best conservative writing of the last 20 years.
A number of years ago, the writers Malcolm Cowley and Bernard Smith invited
a group of American intellectuals to identify the nonfiction books of recent
decades that had most impressed them and had to some extent influenced
their thinking. The result was an intriguing volume entitled Books That
Changed Our Minds. In it, 11 contributors analyzed such classics as
The Education of Henry Adams and Oswald Spengler's Decline of
the West.
The Cowley-Smith anthology came to mind recently when the editors of
Policy Review asked me to compile a list of the most important and
influential works advancing conservative ideas in the past 20 years. At
first the task seemed simple, as obvious candidates sprang quickly to consciousness.
Then it became more daunting, as the sheer scope of conservative literature
since 1977 came into view. How to extract from this vast and specialized
cornucopia a mere 10 or 15 titles? Moreover, many conservative books of
the last two decades have been intellectually important and richly deserving
of recognition but not, alas, as influential as they ought to be. Many
other conservative writings in this period have been primarily of intramural
significance-applauded inside the movement but unfortunately little noticed
outside it.
How, then, should we navigate the rapids? It is here that the Cowley-Smith
volume of years ago suggests a decisive criterion: Which writings of a
conservative character in the past 20 years can be said to have changed
minds? Which have discernably altered America's public conversation
and (in some cases) its public policy?
What follows, then, is neither an exhaustive canon of recent conservative
"great books" nor a mechanical compendium of bestsellers. It is, rather,
a chronological list of 12 books, two articles, and two speeches that,
at least as much as many others, have given the intellectual climate of
our time a conservative cast.
"A World Split Apart"
Commencement address, Harvard University
(June 8, 1978)
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Exiled from the Soviet Union in 1974, the acclaimed author and dissident
came to the West a hero of the resistance to communist tyranny. The message
he brought with him, however, was profoundly discomfiting to liberal and
"pragmatic" Americans in the post-Vietnam era of détente.
In an astonishing commencement address at Harvard, Solzhenitsyn decried
the moral cowardice, flaccidity, materialistic self-indulgence, and misuses
of freedom in the West and accused its ruling elites of a loss of "civic
courage" in the face of communist evil.
How had this predicament come to pass? For Solzhenitsyn, it was nothing
less than a civilizational catastrophe literally centuries in the making.
At Harvard-the academic capital of secular, liberal modernity-he unabashedly
traced the West's "present debility" to a defective worldview "born in
the Renaissance" and unleashed politically by the Enlightenment: "the calamity
of an autonomous, irreligious humanistic consciousness." Liberating "imperfect
man" from "the moral heritage of Christian centuries," and proclaiming
man's autonomy "from any higher force above him," "rationalistic humanism"
had eventually produced, in the 20th century, a world scarred by materialistic
decadence, "moral poverty," and spiritual deprivation. "Humanism that has
lost its Christian heritage," he added, could not prevail against materialistic
communism.
In his searing indictment of atheistic humanism, and in his call for
fundamental spiritual renewal transcending the "ossified formulas of the
Enlightenment," Solzhenitsyn expressed with remarkable force themes espoused
by American conservatives from Whittaker Chambers to the Religious Right
of today.
The Way the World Works (1978)
Jude Wanniski
Hailed by Irving Kristol as the "best economic primer since Adam Smith,"
this book introduced the world to the intellectual counterrevolution of
the 1970s known as supply-side economics. Together with Arthur Laffer,
Jack Kemp, Robert Bartley, and others, Wanniski articulated a growing assault
on a vulnerable Keynesian orthodoxy and-in the process-converted much of
the GOP to a new orthodoxy of its own, centered on economic growth and
cuts in tax rates. Two decades later, tax cuts remain at the core of conservative
Republicanism.
Breaking Ranks (1979)
Norman Podhoretz
If much of modern conservatism is a revolt against the 1930s and the
New Deal, much of contemporary neoconservatism is a revolt against the
1960s. No one has explored the interior history of this decade more trenchantly
than Norman Podhoretz in Breaking Ranks. The editor of Commentary from
1960 to 1995, Podhoretz believes that "clarity is courage," and in this
memoir he tells the story of his journey from liberalism to radicalism
to neoconservatism with a clarity that brought him contumely from former
allies. By publicly defecting from the Left and critiquing it so effectively,
Podhoretz undermined two widespread assumptions in left-of-center circles:
the belief that history, in the long run, always favors "progressive" causes,
and the belief that only liberalism and radicalism are respectable points
of view. By destroying the automatic equation of liberalism with intelligence
and of "progressivism" with progress, Podhoretz and his fellow neoconservatives
made it impossible for the Left to condescend any longer to the Right.
The terrain of public debate in America was transformed.
"Dictatorships and Double Standards"
Commentary
(November 1979)
Jeane Kirkpatrick
When this seminal essay appeared, American foreign policy was floundering.
Pro-American but authoritarian regimes in Nicaragua and Iran had just given
way to anti-American and even more authoritarian ones-and all with the
befuddled collaboration of the U.S. government. Fettered by an idealistic
concern for human rights, the administration of Jimmy Carter seemed increasingly
unable to differentiate friend from foe.
At this critical juncture in the Cold War, Kirkpatrick, a Georgetown
professor and a registered Democrat, propounded two arguments that conservatives
eagerly seized upon. Traditional, authoritarian autocracies, she asserted,
are less repressive, less disruptive of the lives of the people, and less
systemically evil than revolutionary regimes of the Left with their utopian
and totalitarian ideologies. And traditional, authoritarian regimes are
more "susceptible of liberalization" and eventual democratization than
leftist ones led by Marxist revolutionaries.
Kirkpatrick's article led to her becoming the U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations in the Reagan administration. (Ronald Reagan himself read
and admired this essay.) Just as important, it provided American policymakers
a powerful conceptual framework for making necessary distinctions between
greater and lesser evils in their prosecution of the Cold War. This article
helped to relieve what was threatening to become a paralyzing tension between
realism and idealism in American foreign policy.
Free To Choose (1980)
Milton and Rose Friedman
In early 1980, as the nation's economy groaned under the burden of soaring
inflation and unemployment, Nobel laureate Milton Friedman-America's most
famous free-market economist-hosted a 10-part series on public television
entitled Free To Choose. In the spring, he and his wife published
a companion volume by the same name; it became the best-selling nonfiction
book of the entire year. In it they explained with unrivaled lucidity their
classical liberal philosophy of freedom and applied it to a host of policy
issues.
At the end of Free To Choose, the authors ventured to declare
that Americans were "waking up." "We are recognizing the dangers of an
overgoverned society, coming to understand . . . that reliance on the freedom
of people to control their own lives in accordance with their own values
is the surest way to achieve the full potential of a great society." A
few months later, Ronald Reagan was elected president. In Free To Choose,
the Friedmans helped to catalyze the intellectual ferment that produced
the "Reagan Revolution."
Wealth and Poverty (1981)
George Gilder
If Jude Wanniski was the most ardent propagandist for supply-side economics,
writer George Gilder has been called its theologian. Appearing at the dawn
of the Reagan era, Wealth and Poverty audaciously propelled the
case for capitalism upward, out of the mundane sphere of taxation and public
policy and onto the higher plane of morality and metaphysics. Where even
some defenders of the free market had heretofore been willing to give but
two cheers for capitalism, Gilder unashamedly gave three. His book was
an ode to entrepreneurship as marvelously creative, basically altruistic,
and veritably moral. "A successful economy depends on the proliferation
of the rich," he asserted. Successful entrepreneurs were "the heroes of
economic life."
Scorning the gloom-and-doom ideologies of the stagnant 1970s, he proclaimed:
"Our greatest and only resource is the miracle of human creativity in a
relation of openness to the divine." Here was a book worthy of Reagan's
buoyant vision of America. By fearlessly extolling the moral promise of
entrepreneurial capitalism, and by mounting a lively assault on the modern
welfare state, Gilder not only authored an unusual and refreshing apologia
for freedom and creativity. He also strengthened growing populistic sentiment
on the Right against managerial elitists who presume to guide entire economies.
The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism
(1982)
Michael Novak
By the early 1980s, it was increasingly plain that socialism in practice
had failed and that capitalism had proven far more beneficial to the human
race. And yet, despite its undeniable triumphs, wrote Michael Novak, not
one theologian-Christian or Jewish-had ever evaluated the "theological
significance" of this extraordinarily successful form of political economy.
In The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism, Novak-a Roman Catholic
social theorist and historian-elucidated the spiritual and moral foundations
of "democratic capitalism" as an interlocking unity embracing a market
economy, a democratic polity, and a moral-cultural matrix animated by "ideals
of liberty and justice for all." By examining democratic capitalism at
the level of ideals and values, and by declaring its superiority to socialism
at this level, Novak contributed powerfully to the intellectual rehabilitation
of this system of social organization, particularly among Christian thinkers.
His book became an antidote to that strange but fashionable brew of Christianity
and Marxism in the 1970s and 1980s known as "liberation theology."
Reflections of a Neoconservative (1983)
Irving Kristol
In his introduction to this collection of essays, the longtime editor
of the Public Interest observed that neoconservatism "aims to infuse
American bourgeois orthodoxy with a new self-conscious intellectual vigor
while dispelling the feverish mélange of gnostic humors that, for
more than a century now, has suffused our political beliefs and has tended
to convert them into political religions." In the past 20 years, no conservative
or neoconservative has done more to carry out this mission. Much of Irving
Kristol's work has occurred quietly, in his encouragement of the scholarship
and institution-building that have powered the conservative cause. But
much of his contribution has taken the form of incisive and influential
essays published in the Wall Street Journal and various magazines.
Reflections is an excellent collection of these pieces, mostly written
in the late 1970s and early 1980s. This anthology should be supplemented
by Kristol's Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea (1995).
Address to the Natl. Assoc. of Evangelicals
(March 8, 1983)
Ronald Reagan
This was the unforgettable speech in which the president of the United
States forthrightly labeled the Soviet Union an "evil empire." "The real
crisis we face today is a spiritual one," Reagan went on; "at root, it
is a test of moral will and faith." In prose that proved to be prophetic,
he added: "I believe that communism is another sad, bizarre chapter in
human history whose last pages even now are being written."
For American conservatives and for friends of freedom everywhere, Reagan's
address was a bracing affirmation of truth, an ideological shot heard round
the world. It is not too much to suggest that the conservative president's
unapologetic verbal offensive against communism-of which this speech was
a classic expression-was one of the catalytic agents that set the Soviet
Union on the path to extinction.
Modern Times
(1983, rev. 1991)
Paul Johnson
No conservative's bookshelf should be without this provocative reinterpretation
of 20th-century history emphasizing the staggering evil wrought by "the
rise of moral relativism, the decline of moral responsibility, the repudiation
of Judeo-Christian values," intellectual hubris, and the unconstrained,
ideologically driven State. To those who believed that "an enlarged state
could increase the sum total of human happiness," the British ex-socialist
Johnson taught otherwise. In the 20th century, he said, the State "had
proved itself an insatiable spender, an unrivaled waster," and "the greatest
killer of all time." For conservatives of every persuasion-libertarian,
traditionalist, anticommunist, neoconservative, and Religious Right-Johnson's
volume provided an invaluable history lesson and counterweight to the deadly
progressivist utopianism of our times.
The Naked Public Square (1984)
Richard John Neuhaus
In the decade or so before this book appeared, a startling political
awakening of Protestant evangelicals and other religious conservatives
occurred, to the consternation of many liberal Americans. Were not the
Moral Majority and its allies, they thought, threats to democracy and tolerance?
Although often sharply critical of the religious New Right, Richard John
Neuhaus-himself a Christian cleric-was even more disturbed by a regnant
ideology of militant secularism that was driving religion and religiously
derived values from the nation's public life. If our "public square" remains
thus denuded, he warned, democracy itself would be at risk. For the "naked
public square" would not stay empty; the vacuum would be filled by false
gods and tyrants much more intolerant (and intolerable) than traditional
religion. A "public ethic" necessary for the survival of American democracy,
Neuhaus contended, "cannot be reestablished unless it is informed by religiously
grounded values." The "religious base of the democratic experiment" must
be rearticulated.
The Naked Public Square remains a locus classicus for
the argument that people of faith have a right and obligation to participate
in public affairs-not only for their own sakes but for the health of our
common polity. This book endures as a formidable obstacle to secularist
triumphalism.
Losing Ground (1984)
Charles Murray
It was not enough for conservatives in the 1980s to preach the virtues
of democratic capitalism and supply-side economics. They needed a credible
empirical critique of the liberal politics of compassion. In 1984, Charles
Murray delivered it. Deploying an array of statistical indices of social
well-being, Murray documented an astounding pattern: From 1950 to the mid-1960s,
the condition of America's poor (including blacks) gradually improved,
only to deteriorate-often severely-after 1965. Indeed, the "number of people
living in poverty," Murray reported, "stopped declining just as the public-assistance
program budgets and the rate of increase in those budgets were highest."
Whence this staggering and unexpected reversal of the trendlines? Why
did so many of America's poor become worse off in the 1970s than they had
been in the early 1960s? Murray's answer was equally stunning: The War
on Poverty-the crown jewel of Lyndon Johnson's Great Society-wrought devastating
havoc on the poor. The War on Poverty-compassionate liberalism in action-"changed
the rules of their world," encouraged behavior that was "destructive in
the long term," and subsidized its own "irretrievable mistakes." "We tried
to remove the barriers to escape from poverty," said Murray, "and inadvertently
built a trap."
Murray's book was immediately and sometimes harshly criticized from
the Left. But as a sophisticated social scientist who had done his homework,
he could not be ignored. Losing Ground still stands as one of the
most powerful indictments of liberal social policy ever written by a scholar
on the Right.
"Dan Quayle Was Right"
Atlantic Monthly
(April 1993)
Barbara Dafoe Whitehead
By the 1990s, alarming patterns of social deviancy and regression had
begun to appear far beyond the poor and underclass. The structure of the
family itself seemed to be disintegrating, and politicians were taking
note. In a 1992 speech, Vice President Dan Quayle called for a renewed
"public commitment" to "our Judeo-Christian values," including marriage,
and added:
"It doesn't help matters when prime time TV has Murphy Brown-a character
who supposedly epitomizes today's intelligent, highly paid, professional
woman-mocking the importance of fathers, by bearing a child alone, and
calling it just another 'lifestyle choice.'"
For his pains Quayle was scathingly berated, and the cause of "family
values" was mocked. The actress who played Murphy Brown received an honorary
degree at an Ivy League university. How surprising, then, that less than
a year later an Atlantic Monthly article suggested boldly that Quayle
was right. Barbara Dafoe Whitehead-not known as a conservative-assembled
a panoply of data demonstrating what to conservatives seemed obvious: The
widespread dissolution of intact, two-parent families had been harmful
for millions of children. Once more the liberationist ethos of the 1960s
stood indicted by its undeniable consequences. The "vast natural experiment
in family life" in the past 25 years, said Whitehead, had yielded "the
first generation in the nation's history to do worse psychologically, socially,
and economically than its parents."
Whitehead's article-appearing, as it did, in a liberal magazine-undoubtedly
did much to legitimate conservative perspectives on a central issue in
the "culture wars." "Family values" now became everyone's concern. Of course,
many on the Left seemed to prefer to talk about children and their "villages"
(rather than parents) as the key elements in the social equation. Whitehead,
however, stressed the importance of families, a more conservative formulation.
Like many other articles by conservatively oriented analysts in the 1990s,
her essay exemplified the growing validation by social-science research
of traditional moral teachings: what Rudyard Kipling called "the gods of
the copybook headings."
The Book of Virtues (1993)
William Bennett
If the social agenda of religious conservatives could be summed up in
a phrase, it might be (to borrow from Gertrude Himmelfarb) "the re-moralization
of society." But in the face of profound social disorientation, vulgar
relativism and hedonism, and a "naked"-even hostile-"public square," how
does one do this? In 1993, William Bennett resorted to an unconventional
stratagem: He compiled a massive anthology of moral tales and poetry designed
to teach children such virtues as self-discipline, responsibility, courage,
perseverance, and honesty. By drawing primarily upon the classic wisdom
of Western civilization, by writing openly of the need for "moral literacy,"
and by unflinchingly labeling his collection a book of virtues,
Bennett set himself against the postmodernist and decadent sensibilities
so prevalent in elite and popular culture. His anthology became a bestseller.
Bennett's venture is a useful reminder that conservative concerns encompass
more than economics, political theory, and public policy. The preservation
of a humane and civil society requires the constant replenishment of the
moral and spiritual sources of our conduct. In this respect, conservatism
is a private as well as a public philosophy.
The Vision of the Anointed (1995)
Thomas Sowell
In the past two decades, the conservative social scientist Thomas Sowell
has produced a barrage of important books on race and ethnicity, political
philosophy, and other subjects. Of these, the most wide-ranging, yet laserlike
in its intensity, is The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation
as a Basis of Public Policy. In this withering polemic, Sowell lays
bare the underlying assumptions and baneful consequences of "the prevailing
vision of our time," a vision "dangerously close to sealing itself off
from any discordant feedback from reality." It is the predominant vision
of the American intelligentsia and its followers: a "self-anointed elite"
that sees itself as morally and intellectually superior to the rest of
us. Sowell deftly contrasts this elite's worldview-liberalism-with the
"tragic vision" of conservatives. The "anointed," for example, quite literally
consider reality to be "socially constructed" and therefore capable of
being "deconstructed" and reconstructed at will. For them the world is
"a very tidy place," where "human nature is readily changeable" and social
problems can be "solved."
But Sowell does not stop here. Invoking a wealth of social-science data
and other documentation, he concludes that in area after area of American
life, the liberal vision of the anointed has brought about "social degeneration"
and immense devastation since the 1960s. Ours has been an era, he says,
of "self-inflicted wounds "inflicted by "supposedly 'thinking people' "
who fancied themselves "wiser and nobler than the common herd." "Seldom,"
he finds, "have so few cost so much to so many." For a concise, morally
impassioned, and relentless arraignment of contemporary liberalism in theory
and practice, look no further than this book.
| And Let's Not Forget . . .
There are important books and there are influential books. And then
there are indispensable books, like George H. Nash's The Conservative
Intellectual Movement in America Since 1945 (first published in 1976
by Basic Books). Do you want to know the 40 or so scholars and writers
who constituted the intellectual core of American conservatism in the post-World
War II period? How their ideas of limited government, free enterprise,
moral order, and anticommunism were first rejected, then accepted, and
finally came to dominate American politics? How National Review
senior editor Frank Meyer fashioned "fusionism"-his synthesis of the traditionalist
and libertarian branches of conservatism? Or even what Russell Kirk initially
intended to call his monumental work, The Conservative Mind? All
this and much more is to be found in Nash's masterful book, which is part
history, part biography, and always fair in its assessment of the impact
of the diverse philosophers and popularizers of American conservatism.
In an epilogue to the 1996 edition (published by the Intercollegiate Studies
Institute), biographer-historian Nash describes the conservative forces
emerging over the last 20 years, or what he calls "the age of Reagan."
Nash deftly sketches the emergence of the neoconservatives and the rise
of the New Right, which evolved into the Religious Right. He recounts the
remarkable multiplication of conservative journals, advocacy groups, and
think tanks in Washington and across the country. He describes the growing
conservative commitment to restoring civil society from the bottom up.
His brilliant but necessarily brief overview of the current state of conservatism
inspires this reaction: Get busy, Brother Nash. Conservatives need volume
two of The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America.
-Lee Edwards
Lee Edwards, a conservative historian and biographer, is a senior
fellow at The Heritage Foundation |
Not Without Honor: The History of American Anticommunism
(1996)
Richard Gid Powers
When Richard Powers began work on this book, he tells us, he believed
that "anticommunism displayed America at its worst." Instead, "I came to
see in anticommunism America at its best." From a liberal academic in the
1990s, these are unexpected words, and Not Without Honor is an unexpected
book: a comprehensive, scholarly history of American anticommunism in which
the contribution of many conservatives-including William F. Buckley Jr.
and Ronald Reagan-receives respectful, even sympathetic, treatment.
Powers, to be sure, is severely critical of some manifestations of
the anticommunist impulse. To the irritation of some on the Right, he differentiates
sharply between those he deems "responsible anticommunists" (including
Buckley, Norman Podhoretz, and the anticommunist Left) and those he disapprovingly
labels "countersubversives": above all, Senator Joseph McCarthy and his
fellow conspiracy-hunters. In his desire to rescue anticommunism from McCarthyism,
Powers does not, perhaps, take full measure of what James Burnham called
"the web of subversion" that existed in America in the early years of the
Cold War. Still, in a climate of academic opinion long dominated by anti-anticommunist
biases, Not Without Honor presents American resistance to communism
as an essentially honorable and even noble cause. For conservatives-and
for a balanced historical memory-this is a long step forward.
Taken all together, these works remind us of how far conservatism has
traveled since William F. Buckley Jr., in Up From Liberalism, mourned
"the failure of the conservative demonstration." Since then, and with increasing
power and frequency, conservatives have made their "demonstration" in the
demanding arena of public debate. Of course, there is always more to do
as the challenges multiply and as our age (in Whittaker Chambers's words)
"finds its own language for an eternal meaning." |
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