Literature and the Economics of Liberty
Recently Jeffrey Tucker, editorial vice president of the Ludwig Von Mises Institute, interviewed me about capitalism, the free market, and literature. We discussed, among other things, Marxism in...
View ArticleInterview with Troy Camplin, Interdisciplinary Scholar and Author of Diaphysics
Allen Mendenhall interviews Troy Camplin. Troy Camplin holds a Ph.D. in humanities from the University of Texas at Dallas. He has taught English in middle school, high school, and college, and is...
View ArticleTransnational Law: An Essay in Definition with a Polemic Addendum
The Libertarian Alliance (London, U.K.) has published my article “Transnational Law: An Essay in Definition with a Polemic Addendum.” View the article here, or download it from SSRN by clicking here....
View ArticleExcerpt from “Transnational Law: An Essay in Definition with a Polemic...
A few months ago, the Libertarian Alliance, a London-based think tank, published my paper on transnational law. Below is an excerpt from that paper. The piece is available for download through SSRN...
View ArticleBook Review: Paul Cantor and Stephen Cox’s Literature and the Economics of...
The following book review originally appeared here in the Fall 2010 issue of The Independent Review. Humans are not automated and predictable, but beautifully complex and spontaneous. History is not...
View ArticleFredric Jameson and Why Postmodernism is an Enemy of Marxism
“[C]ontemporary theory […] has, among other things, been committed to the mission of criticizing and discrediting this very hermeneutic model of the inside and the outside and of stigmatizing such...
View ArticleCornel West’s Genealogical Approach
“My genealogical approach subscribes to a conception of power that is neither simply based on individual subjects—e.g., heroes or great personages as in traditional historiography—nor on collective...
View ArticlePragmatists Versus Agrarians?
This review originally appeared here at The University Bookman. John J. Langdale’s Superfluous Southerners paints a magnificent portrait of Southern conservatism and the Southern Agrarians, and it...
View ArticleThe Invisible Hand in Popular Culture
This review originally appeared here in The Independent Review. “Television rots your brain.” That’s a refrain many of us grew up hearing, but it isn’t true. So suggests Paul Cantor in The Invisible...
View ArticleReview of James Seaton’s “Literary Criticism from Plato to Postmodernism”
This review first appeared here in The University Bookman. Back when I was a pimple-faced graduate student in English and law, I ordered a book from Amazon titled Cultural Conservatism, Political...
View ArticlePaul H. Fry on the Frankfurt School of Critical Theory
Below is the next installment in the lecture series on literary theory and criticism by Paul H. Fry. The previous lectures are here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here,...
View ArticleJohn William Corrington on the Structure of Gnostic Consciousness
John William Corrington wrote the essay “The Structure of Gnostic Consciousness” around the time he delivered his paper “Gnosticism and Modern Thought: A Way You’ll Never Be” at a conference titled...
View ArticleCultural Marxism is Real
This piece originally appeared here at the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal. Samuel Moyn, a Yale law professor, recently asked, “What is ‘cultural Marxism?’” His answer: “Nothing of the...
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