Pepperdine Digital Commons - Seaver College Research And Scholarly Achievement Symposium: A Genealogical Critique of the Postliberal Right in the United States: Reno, Spengler, Schmitt, Evola, Raspail and All the Vice President’s Men
 

A Genealogical Critique of the Postliberal Right in the United States: Reno, Spengler, Schmitt, Evola, Raspail and All the Vice President’s Men

Author(s)

Hunter DunnFollow

Presentation Type

Oral Presentation

Presentation Type

Submission

Keywords

postliberalism, R.R. Reno, Political Theory, Genealogy, Oswald Spengler, Carl Schmitt, National Conservatism, United States Politics, Decline of the West, Return of the Strong Gods

Department

Political Science

Major

Political Science

Abstract

Over the last decade, the ideological family of postliberalism has become an incredibly potent political force in the United States. R.R. Reno, editor of First Things and a National Conservative (which is a form of postliberalism), contends in his book, Return of the Strong Gods, that postliberalism developed out of a dissatisfaction with the postwar liberal consensus and can serve as a third way between liberalism and the “dark gods” of fascism and racism. This claim merits evaluation; given postliberalism’s influence on prominent figures in the second Trump Administration, including Vice President JD Vance, uncovering the origin of the ideology provides needed context for the modern political landscape. This paper uses a genealogical critique to demonstrate postliberalism’s connection to its predecessor, ethnically-based classical nationalism in the vein of Oswald Spengler and Carl Schmitt. This understanding reveals postliberalism’s failure to properly acknowledge and shake off the sins of its ideological predecessors, which is essential for understanding the shift of the United States’s political right wing on issues including the power of the executive, identity, ethnicity and religion.

Faculty Mentor

Jason Blakely

Funding Source or Research Program

Political Science Honors Program

Location

Black Family Plaza Classroom 189

Start Date

11-4-2025 2:15 PM

End Date

11-4-2025 2:30 PM

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Apr 11th, 2:15 PM Apr 11th, 2:30 PM

A Genealogical Critique of the Postliberal Right in the United States: Reno, Spengler, Schmitt, Evola, Raspail and All the Vice President’s Men

Black Family Plaza Classroom 189

Over the last decade, the ideological family of postliberalism has become an incredibly potent political force in the United States. R.R. Reno, editor of First Things and a National Conservative (which is a form of postliberalism), contends in his book, Return of the Strong Gods, that postliberalism developed out of a dissatisfaction with the postwar liberal consensus and can serve as a third way between liberalism and the “dark gods” of fascism and racism. This claim merits evaluation; given postliberalism’s influence on prominent figures in the second Trump Administration, including Vice President JD Vance, uncovering the origin of the ideology provides needed context for the modern political landscape. This paper uses a genealogical critique to demonstrate postliberalism’s connection to its predecessor, ethnically-based classical nationalism in the vein of Oswald Spengler and Carl Schmitt. This understanding reveals postliberalism’s failure to properly acknowledge and shake off the sins of its ideological predecessors, which is essential for understanding the shift of the United States’s political right wing on issues including the power of the executive, identity, ethnicity and religion.