Articles about Quarterly Review
Peter King - Reactionary politics and what they can, or can't, teach us about the future - Conference talk
Traditional Britain Conferences
Traditional Britain Group Activity
Traditional Britain Group Meetings
by The Editor
Peter King's recorded talk - 'Disdain of the Past' - at the 'Another Country - is there a future for Tradition?' Conference - organised by the Traditional Britain Group and the Quarterly Review.
'Another Country - is there a future for Tradition?' Conference in conjunction with the Quarterly Review

Saturday, 20th October 2012 10:00am
On 20th October, the Traditional Britain Group - a traditional conservative organisation - in conjunction with The Quarterly Review - an historic Tory journal - will be hosting an all day conference in central London titled, 'Another Country - is there a future for Tradition?' The format will allow for a number of 30 to…
The Problem With Unlimited Kindness

by The Editor
PATRICK KEENEY enjoys a witty tossing and goring of a contemporary sacred cow. 'For the past 150 years or so there has been in the West a steady-state sort of political and intellectual conformism which coalesces around these twin ideas of a universal benevolence and universal equality. Enlightened benevolence has triumphed.'
Image Manipulation And Utopianism – Sparta’s Legacies To Modern Europe

by The Editor
Classicist KENNETH ROYCE MOORE delves into one of the oldest and most important ingredients of Western civilisation. Spartan tradition, both real and idealised, had a profound influence on such notable philosophers as Pythagoras, Plato, Aristotle, Diogenes the Cynic, Zeno of Cyttium and others [EDITOR’S NOTE: Zeno of Cyttium (c 340-265 BC) was the founder of Stoicism]. This is especially the case in terms of those who speculatively explored political theory and that which we would today refer to as utopianism and, by extension, the subsequent Western traditions that derive from their philosophies.