Contributors

Boyd D. Cathey, a native North Carolinian, holds an MA degree in American history (as a Thomas Jefferson Fellow) from the University of Virginia, and a PhD in European history (as a Richard M. Weaver Fellow) from the University of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain. He served as assistant to Dr. Russell Kirk from 1971–72, taught on the college level, and was State Registrar for the North Carolina State Archives until retirement. He has published widely and internationally on history, political philosophy, opera, and film. In 2018 his book The Land We Love: The South and Its Heritage was published by Scuppernong Press.

Joseph Cotto is chief editor of the San Francisco Review of Books and co-host of the interview program Cotto/Gottfried. He previously covered current events and style for The Washington Times’s “Communities” section.

Nicholas W. Drummond is an assistant professor of political science at Black Hills State University. He completed his PhD in political science at the University of North Texas. His publications have examined the American Founding, multiculturalism, and the impact of religion and human rights on American foreign policy.

Paul Gottfried is Raffensperger Professor of Humanities Emeritus at Elizabethtown College, a Guggenheim recipient, and the author of multiple reviews and articles and thirteen books, most recently Fascism: The Career of a Concept and Revisions and Dissents. He is currently editor in chief of Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture and on the advisory board of The American Conservative.

Grant Havers is Chair of the Department of Philosophy (with a cross-appointment in the Department of Political Studies) at Trinity Western University. He is the author of Leo Strauss and Anglo-American Democracy: A Conservative Critique and Lincoln and the Politics of Christian Love.

George Hawley is an associate professor of political science at the University of Alabama. His books include Making Sense of the Alt-Right, Right-Wing Critics of American Conservatism, and Demography, Culture, and the Decline of America’s Christian Denominations.

Marjorie L. Jeffrey is an independent scholar with a doctorate in Political Science from Baylor University. Her areas of interest include classical political philosophy, politics and literature, Catholic political thought, and the political thought of Sir Winston Churchill. She is currently working on a book dealing with international relations in Winston Churchill’s war histories.

Jack Kerwick has his doctorate in philosophy from Temple University and specializes in ethics and political philosophy, with a particular interest in classical conservatism. His work has appeared in both scholarly journals and popular publications, and he is the author of four books. He teaches philosophy at Rowan College at Burlington County, New Jersey.

Richard T. Marcy is an Assistant Professor at the School of Public Administration, University of Victoria. His current research is focused on the strategic leadership and radical social innovation of nonviolent, sociopolitical vanguards. Some recent publications include The European New Right as Radical Social Innovation and Breaking Mental Models as a Form of Creative Destruction: The Role of Leader Cognition in Radical Social Innovations.

Keith Preston is chief editor of AttacktheSystem.com. He was awarded the 2008 Chris R. Tame Memorial Prize by the United Kingdom’s Libertarian Alliance for his essay, “Free Enterprise: The Antidote to Corporate Plutocracy.” His dissections of power structures in modern liberal democracies draw on traditions of thought going back to both leftist and rightist social critics of the past.

Jesse Russell is Assistant Professor of English at Georgia Southwestern State University. He has published in a number of academic journals, including New Blackfriars, Texas Studies in Language and Literature, and Political Theology.