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
SOURCE: Christopher Dawson, “Religion in the Age of Revolution,” THE TABLET (1936). Multiple issue series. cd religion in the age of revolution
Source: Christopher Dawson, “The Yogi and the Commissar,” BLACKFRIARS 26 (1945): 366-371. cd yogi 1945
Source: Christopher Dawson, “Religion and Romanticism,” CHRISTENDOM 1 (Summer 1936): 577-592. cd religion and romanticism 1936
Source: Christopher Dawson, “The Claims of Politics,” SCRUTINY 8 (September 1939): 136-141. cd claims of politics
Source: Christopher Dawson, “The Future of National Government,” DUBLIN REVIEW (1935): 236-251. cd future of national government
America and the Secularization of Modern Culture
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
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
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
Here is a not-so-great photocopy/scan of the second issue of ORDER, edited by Tom Burns and Christopher Dawson. order issue 2
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