Place. Limits. Liberty.
Support FPR’s print journal and selection of books.

Front Porch Republic

Don’t Shoot the Messenger

This stranger, rain or shine, snow or hail, more religiously than I prayed as a child, lifted the flap and dropped letters into my family’s home.
December 11, 2025

A Brightly Colored—and Toxic—Digital Childhood

The negative effects of digital poison can, as documented by Haidt, cause a sort of phantom anxiety and depression for an entire generation.
December 10, 2025

The Exciting Familiar: The American Revolution, by Ken Burns and Geoffrey Ward

No filmmaker is as concerned with engaging Americans in our own stories and in our own democracy.
December 9, 2025

Music in the House of Love

While I’m past the point of burning my records and musical books, and I’m no longer having to evacuate coffee shops because “Sympathy for the Devil” is playing, I still…

News, Notes, & Podcasts

Jeffrey Bilbro
Newsletter Editor:
Jeffrey Bilbro
Enter your email to receive a weekly newsletter highlighting what’s new at FPR.
A Farmer Reading His Paper. Photographed by George W. Ackerman, Coryell County, Texas, September 1931.

Attention, Housing, and Subscriptions

Ezra Klein wrestles with the limitations of liberalism in the face of big tech efforts to capture users’ attention.
December 13, 2025

That Special Kind of Sadness: Songs About Los Angeles

We’re spending some (virtual) time in Los Angeles, this week, as the weather starts to get cold most everywhere else.
December 8, 2025
A Farmer Reading His Paper. Photographed by George W. Ackerman, Coryell County, Texas, September 1931.

Miłosz, Butz, and Han

Eric Miller pens a beautiful review of Wendell Berry’s new novel and reflects on the stories and structures that hold sustaining cultures in place.
December 6, 2025

Put a Candle in the Window: Songs About the Light

Just as the light becomes a little more precious and scarce this year, we’re going to listen to songs about it. Send me your song recommendations at symposiumofsongs@gmail.com!
December 1, 2025
See All

More Articles

A Movement: Citizen Humanities?

The term "citizen humanities" argues for the complementary nature of work by academics and non-academics.

The Stuff of Life

A whole-hog way of seeing.
December 4, 2025

Pagans and Prophets: Nadya Williams on the Wisdom of the Ancients

Williams gives readers who may be either loosely familiar with or even quite ignorant of the authors she treats a brief introduction to their importance and what beauty can be found in each of them.
December 3, 2025

Contra Machinam: An Appeal for an AI Resistance

Tradeoffs we should not be willing to tolerate.
December 2, 2025

Large Language Models and the New Scholasticism

In trying to systematize relationships between words and humans, both medieval scholasticism and today’s automated dialogue sterilize the sources of human vitality.

Everything Was Once a Place

Practices that began as bounded places we visited have thinned into atmospheres we inhabit.
November 28, 2025

Passage to Joy: The Use of Poetry

There is nothing greater in which to delight and nothing vaster in terms of the scope of His Being or understanding than God.
November 27, 2025

Those Who Sow in Tears

Hicks's voice is that of a mature seeker, a seeker of hidden beauties and of home in a variety of places.
November 26, 2025

Architecture As Messaging

The endurance of the building itself reinforces implicit messages that foster good character.
November 25, 2025

To Assure, Not Persuade: A Review of Why Christians Should be Leftists

When does religious activity become characteristically “leftist?"
November 24, 2025

The Theological Problem of the “Choosy Womb”, Part 2: Hospitality in a Botanical Paradigm

The botanical paradigm enables me to better live with uncertainty. It enables me to avoid throwing the choosy female body under the bus. It lets me view my complex embodiment more tenderly, and it helps that bitter evolutionary pill go…
November 21, 2025

In Norman Maclean’s Life, There Was No Clear Line between Beauty and Tragedy

McCarthy's biography of Norman Maclean is a splendid addition for the Macleanophile.
November 20, 2025

From the Archive

From the Editor–Local Culture 4.1: The Civil Dissent Issue

Think not, then, of the ubiquitous screens and hideous architecture and suburban metastasis and microwave dinners. Think rather of Eric Voegelin’s famous quip—Voegelin, who said that “no one is obliged…
February 25, 2022

Spiritual Secession: A Conversation with Paul Kingsnorth

" None of your readers need me to tell them that the useful work is practical, particular, small and careful: to get away from screens as much as we can, get…

Tanya Berry’s Faithful Art

Women like Tanya bring artistry and honor to everything they touch: the homes they inhabit, the land they steward, the children they raise. These photographs are testimony to the clear,…
June 15, 2020

Can There be a National Conservatism?

Here’s the irony: a growing number of conservatives realize that it will require the assistance of the State to correct many of the problems that have been created by the…
August 19, 2019

Cheese Should Be Dangerous

The cheese crafted here came about as a byproduct of a larger whole, the natural dividend of a complete way of life, and this is the foundation of the best…
July 23, 2018