In this classic volume, written at the height of the Cold War,
with a new preface of 2006, Peter Viereck, one of the foremost
intellectual spokesmen of modern conservatism, examines the
differing responses of American and European intellectuals to the
twin threats of Nazism and Soviet communism. In so doing, he seeks
to formulate a humanistic conservatism with which to counter the
danger of totalitarian thought in the areas of politics, ethics,
and art.
The glory of the intellectuals was the firm moral stance they
took against Nazism at a time when appeasement was the preferred
path of many politicians; their shame lay in their failure to
recognize the brutality of Stalinism to the extent of becoming
apologists for or accomplices of its tyranny. In Viereck's view,
this failure is rooted in an abandonment of humane values that he
sees as a legacy of nineteenth-century romanticism and certain
strands of modernist thought and aesthetics.
Among his targets are literary obscurantism as personified by
Ezra Pound, the academicization of literary culture, the rigidity
of adversarial avant-gardism, and the failure of many writers and
cultural institutions to conserve the very heritage their political
freedom and security depend on. Viereck represents their attitude
in a series of satirical dialogues with Gaylord Babbitt, son of
Sinclair Lewis' embodiment of conservative philistinism. Babbitt
Junior is as unreflective as his father, but the objects of his
credulity are the received ideas of liberal progressivism and
avant-garde mandarinism. Ultimately, Viereck's critique stands as a
timely rebuke to the extremism of both left and right.
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