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Front Porch Republic

The Voice of Communities in the Conversation of Mankind

What might be gained by viewing Nisbet’s different forms of community as being in a conversation, rather than in a competition?
April 20, 2026

The Voluntary Society

There is no substitute for long-term volunteer commitments.
April 17, 2026

The Perils of Writing in an Age of Distraction

My real fear is not so much that the Internet makes us bad readers, but that it makes us bad writers.
April 16, 2026

Against AI Slop. For Feelable Thought

What will it take to sustain the remnants of a contemporary republic of letters on the margins of a public square blasted by machine-speak?
Jeffrey Bilbro
April 15, 2026

News, Notes, & Podcasts

Jeffrey Bilbro
Newsletter Editor:
Jeffrey Bilbro
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Keeps Me Up at Night with the Memory: Songs About Nostalgia

We’re looking back with a golden haze this week on A Symposium of Popular Songs, listening to songs about nostalgia (and its high-class cousin, antiquarian feeling). Send your song suggestions…
April 20, 2026
A Farmer Reading His Paper. Photographed by George W. Ackerman, Coryell County, Texas, September 1931.

Techn-Kings, Micro-Colleges, and Groupthink

If you think an algorithmic function can have a moral character, I’m not sure you’ll have a productive conversation about aligning AI with human goods.
April 18, 2026

When You Win, Everyone Wants In: Songs About Success

This week on A Symposium of Popular Songs, we’re listening to songs about success—its joys, its sorrows, and its dangers. Send your song recommendations to symposiumofsongs@gmail.com!
April 13, 2026
A Farmer Reading His Paper. Photographed by George W. Ackerman, Coryell County, Texas, September 1931.

Chesterton, Lukacs, and Joe

Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn expresses gratitude for Wendell Berry’s latest novel and his faithful voice speaking truth over many decades.
April 11, 2026
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More Articles

Perhaps the Nails Run the Other Way: A Review of The Body of this Death

Hope remains, and it is the hope of the incarnation, which the Archbishop describes as the “technology of Catholicism.”
April 14, 2026

Why We Abandon Books

Maybe my reading taste buds are dull. Maybe I’m in a lazy slump. Do I need more books? More appealing choices? Am I even asking the right question?

Prophetic Possibilities: A Few Words on David W. Orr and a Healing Vision for America

A healing vision for America, Orr suggests in his writings, is one faithful to the great nearby, to the gospel of the local.
April 10, 2026

Can Driftwood Determine?

Maybe we ought to use our being and thinking not to decide what our lives should be “for” or “against,” but rather what we would like our lives to define.
April 9, 2026

The Age of AI Parenting

Altman, while acknowledging that people can and have parented before AI, stated that he cannot imagine parenting without it.
April 8, 2026

Old Fred’s Night Music

What is the ideal that we sometimes glimpse within the world and which thus inspires our own attempts at order-making, at meaning-making?

Why Cormac McCarthy Stands Alone Among Novelists

McCarthy, a little before the rest of us, had caught a glimpse of Western Civilization’s end.
April 6, 2026

Gardening and the Moral Life

For humility, there is nothing like gardening.

The Exemption Option: AI and Believers

Emerging tools have to justify themselves to us more than we have to justify ourselves to emerging tools.
April 2, 2026

Speculators versus Farmers: A Review of The Land Trap

Land is only going to become more expensive and thus ever more unaffordable and inaccessible for the agrarians of the future.

The Weighty News of the World

The 1890s gave rise to the journalistic trope, if it bleeds, it leads. And news has never been the same since.

We Are Not Enemies: What an Iranian Film Reveals About Vengeance and Civility

However strained, the bonds of affection must not be broken.
March 30, 2026

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