Intercollegiate Review | Fault Lines and First PrinciplesConservatism's sharpest voices, curated weekly. ISI's Intercollegiate Review brings you the best in serious conservative thought.
National Conservatism’s Great DivideLast week, hundreds of conservatives gathered in Washington, DC for the fifth annual National Conservatism Conference. In past years, conference speakers urged conservatives to gather around an America First vision to combat the radical agenda of the ruling elites on the Left. But with Trump in the White House and wokeism falling out of fashion, the national conservative movement no longer shares a common enemy as strongly as it once did. In an article for UnHerd, James Billot highlights the division at the heart of the national conservative movement. Rather than gaining momentum after Trump’s 2024 victory, the NatCon movement has become embroiled in a civil war. Billot suggests that the deepest fault lines lie between pro-Israel hawks and foreign policy realists. This division has always existed in the national conservative coalition—formed from the start by a diverse group of factions—but the wars in Gaza and Iran have made it impossible to ignore the tension any longer. Although NatCon leaders attempted to foster dialogue between the pro-Israel advocates and the realists, Billot and other attendees were left wondering whether real reconciliation is possible on such a divisive issue. Read the rest of Billot’s coverage of the 2025 NatCon conference here.
Disney World and the American DreamA recent New York Times article titled “Disney and the Decline of America’s Middle Class” has garnered attention on social media. The guest author followed 60-year-old single mother and bus driver Scarlett Cressel and her family on a Disney World trip made possible by years of careful budgeting. Cressel hoped to share with her grandchildren the magical experiences she remembered from childhood visits to Disney World, but instead she found that most of that “Disney magic” was now reserved for the biggest spenders. In a Substack response, Peachy Keenan suggests the NYT article resonated among readers because it captured the “all-American caste system”—the same caste system J.D. Vance depicted in Hillbilly Elegy that helped propel Trump’s surprise victory in 2016. Disney executives recognized that they could maximize profits by catering to the ultra-wealthy who can afford a premier experience. Never mind that it comes at the expense of the working-class Americans who grew up dreaming of Disney trips. People like Scarlett Cressel, Keenan notes, are the “forgotten men and women” who supported Trump because he was one of the few Americans in power who acknowledged their plight. Read the rest of Keenan’s article here. CompendiumEvery article we feature here is available to read for free. Articles from paywalled publications are available through gift links.
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Visit our Student Journalism section to read more from the Collegiate Network. Great Books, Great Education?In today’s higher education landscape, where many colleges prioritize activism over education, an emphasis on Great Books can signal that a college is truly serious about learning. Yet, while carefully reading primary texts and grappling with complex ideas is important, some believe the concept of Great Books is less traditional than it appears. In this week’s article from Modern Age, Catholic professor Frederick D. Wilhelmsen argues that, in his field of philosophy in particular, the Great Books method actually represents a departure from traditional teaching methods. He advocates for a return to the scholastic method of philosophical instruction, which focuses on “mastery of subjects and the acquisition of habits in pursuit of that mastery.” Although primary texts play an important role in scholastic approach, they are considered secondary to the ideas themselves, with greater emphasis on teaching students to think philosophically “about the real.” Wilhelmsen suggests that the scholastic method better prepares students to practice philosophy, equipping them to join a living tradition of thought rather than merely read—however carefully—the works of historic philosophers. Read the rest of Wilhelmsen’s essay here on the Modern Age website. Modern Age is ISI’s flagship publication. Visit modernagejournal.com and subscribe for a free daily newsletter. “Whenever people ask me what I’d most like to change about the white working class, I say, ‘The feeling that our choices don’t matter.’” – J.D. Vance, Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis Celebrate America’s semiquincentennial with ISI and help shape the next 250 years of our country. Your support of the America 500 Education Fund will help ISI reach, teach, and launch the next generation of conservative leaders. Visit isi.org/america500 to learn more. |