Hello,
As you may know, Fondazione Evola has been publishing
thematic 'quaderni' (journals) for thirty years, since Evola's death;
there are about forty of them. Each of them has a short introduction,
written by an Italian specialist of Evola's work. Yet, they do not
contain any essays.
Your idea is definitely interesting. However, at the time being,
three factors go against its practical realisation. In the first
place, we'd rather publish thematic journals, and the fact is that we
still haven't translated enough articles on the same subject to be
able to bring out, say, a 64-page journal, knowing, besides, that
there wouldn't be more than one essay in it. Of course, there are
people able to write 150-page introductions on Evola's work or even
on a particular point of his work It turns out that we haven't been
particularly impressed, to say the least, by none of the essays of
that length which we have read in the field of Evolian studies.
Leaving this aside, the fact is that there are not many worthy
critics of Evola's work outside Italy, Spain and France, and, after
all, it's quite natural since this work is still new to the others,
who, besides, don't have at their disposal all the texts, because
they haven't been translated into their language yet. Now, worthy
French critics either have vanished in thin air or they had a change
of heart in the 1990's; as for Italians, we are afraid to say that
the source of revenue which 'Three Aspects of the Jewish Problem'
and 'The Elements of Racial Education' are not, by any means, do not
allow us to contact them in this connection. While we are at it, we'd
like to express our warmest gratitude to Anglo-Saxon distributors of
the nationalist brand, of the far-right conglomeration for the
unshakable and tremendous support they have always zealously provided
to Thompkins&Cariou since the publication of 'Three Aspects of the
Jewish Problem' in December 2003. If a book is not distributed, the
reader doesn't even know it exists, and these do know it: it shows.
In the third place, we tend to be more focused on books than on
magazines or on journals, and, as a matter of fact, 'The Elements
of 'Racial Education' is not the last book by Julius Evola which we
intend to publish. This doesn't mean that we disregard your idea, far
from it. As we have just said, it is interesting, and you were
perfectly right to inquire.
Thompkins&Cariou
--- In
evola_as_he_is@yahoogroups.com, "skyegamble89"
<skyegamble89@y...> wrote:
>
>
> I thank Thompkins&Cariou for their wonderful website and much
needed
> translations of Evola into english. I apologize in advance if this
> question has
> already been answered or if this is the incorrect place to pose it;
> have you
> (Thompkins&Cariou) ever considered the annual publication of a
> journal
> containing new translations of Evola into english and
essays/analyses
> of his
> work? I would think it would be a good source of revenue, and more
> importantly, a great boon to the many english-speaking students of
> Evola's
> work. Thank you again, and keep up the brilliant work.