Welcome Home to the Russell Kirk Center
Strengthening America’s Tradition of Order, Justice & Freedom
The Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal aims to recover, conserve, and enliven those enduring norms and principles that Russell Kirk (1918–1994) called the Permanent Things. Explore the Center’s programs, publications, and fellowships and join with us to continue Kirk’s work to renew our culture and redeem our time.
Sign up to receive our semiannual newsletter, Permanent Things.
At the Kirk Center
Events
November 19: Prize Gala at the National Press Club in Washington, DC —The Richard D. McLellan Prizes for Advancing Free Speech & Expression
November 25 – December 16: Online Master Class — The Moral Imagination of Jane Austen
December 8 — Fourth Annual Gerald Russello Memorial Lecture in New York — “The Urbanity of Russell Kirk” with James Panero
Mecosta House Books
Explore Mecosta House
At Mecosta House, we aim to combine with the Kirk Center’s programs to foster an intellectual community dedicated to exploring the wisdom of our predecessors while forging a new conservative humanism.
We hope our readers will be edified by the titles we publish, and that they will strengthen the programs and the courses we will introduce at the Kirk Center as part of our School of Conservative Studies. David Hein’s Teaching the Virtues offers a fresh look at a perennial educational aim—encouraging virtue in the next generation, and we are proud to present it as our first book.
From the University Bookman
Robert Nisbet’s The Social Philosophers Revisited: Conservative Pluralism versus the Mania for Unity
“…Nisbet shows that freedom and nobility (or excellence) can only survive when civic and social pluralism allows authentic human individuality and real (as opposed to ideologically-induced) community ample room to flourish.”
Latest Pieces
The Social Philosophers: A Reading for the Present
“…in Nisbet’s reading, conflict fulfills a paradoxical function: it is, to a large extent, the experience of uprooting and rupture that most strongly awakens the need for community. In other words, the longing for community becomes more conscious and pressing where community has been lost or weakened.”
A Sociology of the Permanent Things: Nisbet’s Tocquevillian Philosophy
“The great crisis of our time, which Tocqueville prophesied and Nisbet diagnosed, is the collapse of those intermediary institutions that can resist the drift toward democratic despotism.”
Natural Law and the Need for Moral Clarity
“Christians need clarity on the way their faith shapes their political activity. This ambiguous book fails to provide that clarity.”
Moral Realism Over and Against Contingent Pluralism
“The challenge for… all natural law theorists is the proper ordering and integration of the contingencies of a given culture and the universality of the primary precepts of natural law.”
History on Improper Principles
“The condescending attitude—even animus—behind this book is, in fact, among the reasons Trump came to power in the first place. Voters, clearly sick of being sneered at by elites like Lichtman and his colleagues in the established commentariat, have turned to populism as an outlet for their frustrations.”
About the Bookman
For six decades, the University Bookman, founded by Russell Kirk, has identified and discussed those books that diagnose the modern age and support the renewal of culture and the common good. Currently published online, the Bookman continues its mission of examining our times in light of the Permanent Things that make us human.
Subscribe for all Bookman Reviews and Essays