1st Edition

Writing on the Southern Front Authentic Conservatism for Our Times

By Joseph Scotchie Copyright 2018
    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    For traditionalists, the conservative ascendency of the 1980s turned out to be a major disappointment. With the triumph of multiculturalism and political correctness, liberalism seemed to move from strength to strength. Still, a stout number of southern conservative writers plunged forward, and their themes of populism, immigration, and cultural integrity are seeing a contemporary resurgence. Discussing a wide array of authors who worked in a variety of genres, Joseph Scotchie celebrates those unreconstructed champions who fought the culture wars of their times with a special learning and vigor. Also included in this collection are creative artists who kept the flame of literature alive, providing visions of possibilities that only genre can provide.

    Foreword Paul Gottfried

    Introduction: The Search for an Authentic Conservatism

    Part I. The Southern Tradition

    I.1 Why They Hate Thomas Jefferson

    I.2 Robert E. Lee: The Unvanquished General Lee

    I.3 Robert E. Lee: General Lee and Copperhead New York

    I.4 Zebulon Vance: The Greatest Tar Heel

    I.5 The Other Side of Empire: Antiwar Southrons

    I.6 Southrons First: Dixie Democrats Revisited

    I.7 Agrarian Valhalla: The Vanderbilt Twelve and Beyond

    I.8 Donald Davidson: The Patron Saint of Southern Traditionalists

    I.9 Donald Davidson: Donald, Danny and Cissy

    I.10 The View From Monteagle: Honoring Andrew Lytle On The Occasion Of His Centennial

    I.11 Richard M. Weaver: Philosopher From Dixie

    I.12 M.E. Bradford: History In The Bones

    I.13 Red’s Revenge

    I.14 Thomas Wolfe: The Provincial Traveler

    I.15 Thomas Wolfe and New York: The Perfect Marriage

    I.16 Something of How To Live: The World of Wendell Berry

    I.17 The Last Great Virginian

    I.18 The Lost World of Allen Tate

    Part II. Towards a New Conservatism

    II.1 An Antidote to Multiculturalism

    II.2 A Bundle of Contradictions

    II.3 Cant Free Conservatism

    II.4 Clyde Wilson: A Republic, If You Want It

    II.5 Clyde Wilson: The People’s Historian

    II.6 The Rest of the Story

    II.7 A Nation of Immigrants?

    II.8 The Unvanquished Senator Helms

    II.9 The Devil and Enoch Powell

    Part III. Patrick J. Buchanan

    III.1 The Wal Mart Economy

    III.2 All Empires End in Ruin

    III.3 The Shock of Recognition

    III.4 The Last Conservative

    III.5 America Used to Be Your Country

    III.6 Should Britain have Stayed Home?

    Part IV. Samuel T. Francis

    IV.1 Goodbye, Middle America

    IV.2 "Conserve," Hell!

    IV.3 While America Sleeps

    IV.4 Samuel T. Francis, R.I.P.

    IV.5 Another Shot of Courage

    Part V. A Republic of Letters

    V.1 Saul Bellow: An Appreciation

    V.2 Existence is the Job

    V.3 Updike at Rest

    V.4 J.D. Salinger: All’s Well that Ends Well

    V.5 T.S. Eliot, Editor

    V.6 The Young Man and His Corona

    V.7 Walk Like a Man: The Early Novels of Richard Price

    V.8 All of America

    V.9 What it Takes: The Larry Brown Story

    V.10 Mark Royden Winchell: Last of the Vanderbilt Greats

    Biography

    Joseph Scotchie is the author or editor of eight books, including The Vision of Richard Weaver, Barbarians in the Saddle, The Paleoconservatives, and Revolt from the Heartland. His work has won awards from the New York State Press Association and the North Carolina Society of Historians. A graduate of both the University of North Carolina at Asheville and the City College of New York, Scotchie has worked for three decades as a journalist in the New York City area.

    PRAISE FOR WRITING ON THE SOUTHERN FRONT

    For a quarter of a century, Joseph Scotchie has been a thoughtful interpreter of the Southern agrarian literary tradition and its shirt-tail political cousin, paleoconservatism. These essays, whose subjects range widely from Pat Buchanan to Robert E. Lee, and from Saul Bellow to Scotchie's beloved Asheville homeboy Thomas Wolfe, are both provocative and welcome.

    Bill Kauffman, Author of Ain't My America: The Long, Noble History of Antiwar Conservatism and Middle American Anti-Imperialism

    A generation of Americans deprived of intellectual substance and force-fed flavorless cant can look to the living Southern tradition, thoroughly and masterfully introduced and explicated in Joseph Scotchie’s Writing on the Southern Front, for sustenance and inspiration. Readers familiar with some of the writers Scotchie fearlessly treats will benefit from seeing them in their powerful and broad context; the uninitiated will delight in the discovery of works on American history, culture, and politics previously withheld from them by an understandably fearful left.

    Aaron D. Wolf, Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture

     

    PRAISE FOR JOSEPH SCOTCHIE'S EARLIER WORK

    For Barbarians in the Saddle

    We owe Mr. Scotchie thanks for bringing [Richard Weaver] once more to our attention. I would particularly recommend this book to young conservatives who may not know there was a time when conservative ideas – real ideas, not just futuristic slogans, ideological dogmas and talk-show polemics – were at the heart of American conservatism.

    William F. Gavin, The Washington Times

    For The Paleoconservatives

    The great, the consuming virtue of The Paleoconservatives is the meticulous attention its contributors pay to how we should live and what we should believe: what ideas we could – gulp – offer to die for. Not a few of these essays are exhilarating. All are challenging, Bravo, Scotchie, I would say. Bravo, the well-placed, literate concern for intelligence and dignity and honor and freedom.

    William Murchison, Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture

    For Thomas Wolfe Revisited

    If, as Mr. Scotchie avers, American college students no longer read great novels, his book should go a long way to encouraging them to re-open the novels of Thomas Wolfe, one of the giants of American literature.

    Eileen Brennan, The Manhasset (NY) Press

    For Revolt from the Heartland

    This book … is the best little concise history of principled conservatism I have seen. I was not able to put it down, reading it all in one sitting.

    Nat Rudulph, Southern Events

    [Scotchie] has given us … an essential and valuable contribution to American intellectual history in the last decade of the last century.

    Samuel Francis, The American Conservative

    For Street Corner Conservative

    Scotchie’s biography is a comprehensive treatment of the most compelling life story of the past 50 years within conservative ranks, surpassing even that of [Pat Buchanan’s] idol, Ronald Reagan.

    J.W. Moses, South Carolina Review

    For A Gallery of Ashevilleans

    Joe Scotchie’s history of Asheville personalities is both a labor of love and an exhibit of unique knowledge and perspective. Every city should have a book like this – but then, not every city is as interesting as Asheville.

    Clyde N. Wilson, University of South Carolina