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2018 Conference

1968 Fifty Years Later: A Re-Evaluation

Thanks to all those who joined us for a provocative and convivial gathering this past Saturday. Even though it wasn’t live-tweeted (or perhaps because it wasn’t live-tweeted), we had a great conference (in fact, FPR conferences have an unusually high-percentage of pockets populated by flip phones or no phone at all). We heard from people who were caught up in the April 4, Martin Luther King Jr. riots in Chicago as well as the DNC riots later that August. We thought about the dramatic shifts that have occurred in the past fifty years as well as the problems and tensions that have stubbornly endured. And we enjoyed excellent food and beverages at the Grand River Brewery.

In some ways it was an unusual FPR conference: Philip Reiff may have been mentioned more than Wendell Berry. And, for the first time ever, Jason Peters didn’t give a talk (though, as the chair of the panel on sex, he did take the opportunity to crack several mostly appropriate jokes). Yet there was FPR’s traditional blend of good humor and serious, counter-cultural analysis rooted in localist commitments. Some of the talks will be posted on the website in the coming weeks, so if you weren’t able to be with us, you can still get a taste of our discussion. Plans are already afoot for next year’s tenth-anniversary conference, so keep an eye out for forthcoming details and make plans to join us for good fellowship and place-centered dialogue.

Saturday, September 22

Race (9:15-10:30)
  • Samuel Hogsette, “Race: 1968-2018 Progress or Illusion?”
  • T. R. Thompson, “Homo sum”
  • Grace Potts, “Things Are Not Always As They Seem”
  • Sex (10:45-12:00)
  • Patrick Deneen, “The Most Unholy and Savage of Animals: How Not to Eat (or have sex)”
  • Kate Dalton, “Having it All”
  • Shawn Floyd, “All you beasts of the field, come and devour…”
  • David Bosworth, “Fear and Loathing in Chicago”
    War (2:15-3:30)
  • Bill Kauffman, “We Haven’t Had that Spirit Here Since 1968”
  • Jeff Polet, “Robert Nisbet and the War State”
  • Culture (3:45-5:00)
  • Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn, “New Age Gnosticism and the Return of Its Ancient Foe”
  • D. G. Hart, “When Garry Wills and Brent Bozell Left National Review Conservatism Failed”
  • Jeremy Beer, “Indirect and Internalized: The Surprising Strength of our Ironic Cultural Authority”
  • Sponsors

    Plough