Secret Aristocracies
Translated by Greg JohnsonJean-Paul Sartre once said of Ernst Jünger: “I hate him, not as a German, but as an aristocrat . . .”Sartre had some grave defects. In his political impulses, he was mistaken with a rare obstinacy. Fairly cowardly during the Occupation, he turned into an Ayatollah of denunciations once the danger had passed, castigating his colleagues who did not...
Read MoreA Posthumous Revenge
Translator’s Note: The following excerpt is taken from the concluding chapter of Venner’s Gettysburg, one of two books he’s written on the War of Southern Secession. Like Maurice Bardèche’s Sparte et les sudistes [Sparta and the Confederates], it reflects the other side of that European anti-liberalism which crusades against everything contemporary America...
Read MoreThe Rebel:
An Interview with Dominique Venner
The noted French nationalist and historian speaks to the personal imperatives of white liberation. Translator’s Note: It’s testament to the abysmal state of our culture that hardly one of Dominique Venner’s more than forty books have been translated into English. Venner is more than a gifted historian who has made major contributions to the most important...
Read MoreThe Metaphysics of Memory
Translated by Michael O’Meara“Memory” is a much abused word. But so too is the word “love,” which doesn’t mean it can’t be used in its fullest sense. It’s the force of “memory,” transmitted within the bosum of the family, that enables a community to endure, despite all that seeks its dissolution. It’s the long...
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