Against Nihilism: Julius Evola’s “Traditionalist” Critique of Modernity
With the likes of Oswald Spengler, whose Decline he translated for an Italian readership, and Jose Ortega y Gasset, Julius Evola (1898 – 1974) stands as one of the notably incisive mid-Twentieth Century critics of modernity. Like Spengler and Ortega, Evola understood himself to owe a formative debt to Friedrich Nietzsche, but more forcefully than Spengler or Ortega, Evola saw the...
Read MoreBy Michael O'Meara 2
Another European Destiny, Part II
Editor’s Note: For the first part of this review essay on Dominique Venner’ s Ernst Jünger: Un autre destin européen (Paris: Éds. du Rocher, 2009), click here.4. Der ArbeiterJünger’s nationalist politics turned out to be a passing phase in his long life. By 1930, after the wind started to go from the revolutionary-nationalist sails and the National...
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From Dusk to Dawn
From the Guillaume Faye ArchiveThe following talk was given in Moscow on May 17, 2006.Not since the fall of the Roman Empire has Europe experienced such a dramatic situation. It faces a danger unparalleled in its history and doesn’t even know it — or rather refuses to see it.It’s been invaded, occupied, and colonized by peoples from the South and by Islam. It’s dominated by...
Read MoreBy Michael O'Meara 1
From Nihilism to Tradition
Histoire et tradition des européennes:30,000 ans d’identité Dominique VennerParis: Éditions du Rocher, 2002I. Race of Blood, Race of SpiritIn the United States, nationalists take their stand on the question of race, arguing that it denotes meaningful differences between subspecies, that these differences have significant behavioral and social ramifications, and that the...
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