Modern radicalism was launched by the devolution of democracy into democratism.
The grand strategy of the Great Reset is “divide and conquer.”
Marie de Vignerot was Richelieu’s right-hand woman at the height of France’s global empire.
The Nobel Prize-winner’s intellectual memoir shows how classical liberalism morphs into a narrow neoliberalism.
The German Jesuit Alfred Delp offered Christian resistance to totalitarian violence—a message far more complex and powerful than black-and-white ideological readings.
“Democracy without private property is fundamentally unstable and will not survive,” says Mark Mitchell. But how to protect it in an increasingly socialist age?
A late and talented member of a long American poetic tradition.
Why didn’t the nineteenth century produce a British Beethoven—or a Handel, for that matter?
David Hackett Fischer says the transmission of African cultures to America is crucial to the “mix of many mixtures” of a workable open society.
Will the first internet generation be the death of our literary culture?
Founded in 1957 by Russell Kirk and Henry Regnery, Modern Age is a journal of conservative thought and a magazine devoted to culture, history, philosophy, and the ideas behind the great currents of modern life. Follow us on X @ModAgeJournal
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