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?
An engaging account of the Jeffersonians in their own time and on their own terms.
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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