> The view that a race can create itself strikes me as very Hegelian, for the more mainstream Fascist thinkers this might of been an aim, but for Evola I would of thought not.
"We do not make any profession of Hegelian faith. We think that we can and must attack many points of the Hegelian framing, considering them as living in the past: but the fit of metaphysic synthesis animating and building that structure has to be recognized and respected."
(J. Evola, "Di chi è precursore Hegel ?", La Vita Italiana 1934).
Hello, Julius Evola wrote in "Orientamenti": "Our true fatherland must be recognized in the idea. Not being of the same land or language, but being of the same...
Hello, He did, in this book which has not been translated into English yet and which he often quoted during his trial in Rome in 1951, indeed; and those who...
Hello, Let's also bear in mind that the idea of a Fatherland which cannot be occupied by any enemy whatsoever can be found in Jünger's early work, "Der...
In the introduction to 'Men Among The Ruins'(p. 104 in the online version), Hansen quotes a paragraph supposedly from 'Revolt Against The Modern World' : "The...
In <evola_as_he_is@yahoogroups.com> evola_as_he_is wrote: (...) ... Or in Latin words (Horace): Si fractus illabitur orbis, impavidum ferient ruinae = even if...
... The view that a race can create itself strikes me as very Hegelian, for the more mainstream Fascist thinkers this might of been an aim, but for Evola I ...
It's not curious, it's fanciful, and, as a result, it should not be taken seriously. ... feeling", but ... constant, ... "race", ... certain "way ... for the ...
The work of J. Evola is full of unequivocal statements in stark contrast with that fanciful view on race expressed, along somehow romantico-evolutionist lines,...
In <evola_as_he_is@yahoogroups.com> ... "We do not make any profession of Hegelian faith. We think that we can and must attack many points of the Hegelian...
Well, if you want to know the story of Evola's return to his home City Rome, the reading of Clemente Graziani's book of rememberances would be a good tip....
All sources agree : Evola came back to Italy at the end of 1948. The original source is a letter from him to Girolamo Comi, published in 1987 by Fondazione J....
Concerning the post-WW2 generation of which is spoken in both messages, I would like to ask if someone is perhaps able to shed more light on this group of...
You refer to the post-WW2 Italian 'far-right' generation in particular, then. Evola himself has shed light on that group of people whom he knew personally for...