Stormfields

Christopher Dawson, “Religion in the Age of Revolution,” (1936).

SOURCE: Christopher Dawson, “Religion in the Age of Revolution,” THE TABLET (1936).  Multiple issue series. cd religion in the age of revolution

Christopher Dawson, “The Yogi and the Commissar,” (1945)

Source: Christopher Dawson, “The Yogi and the Commissar,” BLACKFRIARS 26 (1945): 366-371. cd yogi 1945

Christopher Dawson, “Religion and Romanticism,” (Summer 1936)

Source: Christopher Dawson, “Religion and Romanticism,” CHRISTENDOM 1 (Summer 1936): 577-592. cd religion and romanticism 1936

Dawson, “The Claims of Politics,” 1939.

Source: Christopher Dawson, “The Claims of Politics,” SCRUTINY 8 (September 1939): 136-141. cd claims of politics

Dawson, “Future of National Government,” 1935

Source: Christopher Dawson, “The Future of National Government,” DUBLIN REVIEW (1935): 236-251. cd future of national government

Christopher Dawson’s 1960 Speech at UST, Houston

America and the Secularization of Modern Culture

Happy New Year: A Feast of Christopher Dawson Material

cd new decline and fall Dawson, “New Decline and Fall,” COMMONWEAL 15 (1932), 370-372. cd sign of bolshevism Dawson, “The Significance of Bolshevism,” ENGLISH REVIEW (September 1932): 239-250. cd review of mein kampf Dawson, review of MEIN KAMPF,… Read More

Dawson, Christianity and Sex (full book)

In the late 1920s, T.S. Eliot asked Christopher Dawson to write a small book on the meaning of family in the western and Christian tradition.  The two would come to collaborate frequently, but this was the first thing… Read More

Christopher Dawson, “The Claims of Politics,” 1939

A transcription of the seminal article, Christopher Dawson, “The Claims of Politics,” SCRUTINY 8 (September 1939): 136-141. The expansion of Politics from the narrow limits of utilitarian Liberalism to the all-embracing claims of the totalitarian com­munity-state has already had… Read More

Order, Issue no. 2

Here is a not-so-great photocopy/scan of the second issue of ORDER, edited by Tom Burns and Christopher Dawson. order issue 2

Embrace Humanity, not Ideology

One of the great contributions of the Christian Humanists of the twentieth century–in particular, Christopher Dawson, C.S. Lewis, and Russell Kirk–is the realization that no left-right divide exists beyond the contrivance of those who seek power.  They employ… Read More