Scott Yenor
Scott Yenor
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Aaron Renn, The Need for Cultural Insurgency
Aaron Renn shares thoughts about how Christians and American conservatives should act in the negative world. The negative world is where attachment to the old American ideas are a net negative, are evaluated negatively by the people in charge of admission into elite institutions. This reality must change how people act and think. Aaron offers six suggestions for those outside elite institutions to guide their lives and their activities. A real tour de force!
zhlédnutí: 685

Video

Houellebecq Atomised: Humanity's Bleak Future (Video 7)
zhlédnutí 500Před 2 lety
Few books are as bleak as Houllebecq's Atomised. Between the sexual revolution, the triumph of science, and the death of the old way. But the novel ends ambiguously in that it is not clear if the new humanity toward which Michel points is really a human possibility. The new humanity is immortal and asexual. But there are reasons to think that muddling through is the real possibility.
Houellebecq Atomised: The End of Annabelle (Video 6)
zhlédnutí 347Před 2 lety
Annabelle is a key figure in the novel, a woman capable of love but unable to find it in the new sexual regime. She has several aboritons, but ends up becoming pregnant from Michel. Cancer cuts short her pregnancy and her life. This video talks about the significance of the fact that Annabelle cannot find love. Further research into Annabelle is needed, as her character seems based on a charact...
Houellebecq's Atomised: Bruno and the Decadence of Modern Man (Video 5)
zhlédnutí 491Před 2 lety
The sexual revolution is often portrayed as a step on the way to post-privacy, communist revolution-it would be a time for human sex love where love and sex are equated. Certainly Marx and Engels saw it that way. Certainly the Liberationists like Marcuse and Reich thought so. Houellebecq has a different view. The sexual revolution for him is part of the neoliberal economic revolution-the creati...
Houellebecq Atomised: Michel's Inhumanity (Video 4)
zhlédnutí 469Před 2 lety
This video covers Bruno’s brother, Michel, and Annabelle, the character that comes from a pretty traditional family. Michel is the main character in the book-one might call him the protagonist. The book begins with him as an older man getting ready to take a sabbatical from his job as a biological researcher. The book ends with a reflection on his contributions to making a new humanity. That Ep...
Houellebecq's Atomised: Bruno Confronts the Sexual Revolution (Vid 3)
zhlédnutí 629Před 2 lety
Bruno is the character most exposed to this sexualized materialism of all those in his generation. He turns 18 in 1974. Bruno is an omega male-introverted, sensitive, not taking initiative. After the brutalization of his boarding school, Bruno had a date with Caroline Yessayan in Section 10. He calls this “the defining moment of his life.” What happened? Why did it matter? This video takes a tr...
Crime and Punishment: Raskolnikov and the Law (Video 10)
zhlédnutí 584Před 2 lety
The confrontation with Porfiry is not simply a criminal and a cop. It is ultimately a Christian version of the law accusing and turning Raskolnikov on the road to confession. It is indispensable in that sense.
Crime and Punishment: Raskolnikov, Svidrigailov, and Path to Suicide (Video 9)
zhlédnutí 2,4KPřed 2 lety
Svidrigailov is an old-time sinner, not a new fangled ideologue like Raskolnikov. He seems to be a disgusting character, preying on young women and perhaps killing his wife and beating his servants. But the question is whether he has a conscience and whether he can keep courting (in a manner of speaking) Raskolnikov's sister, Dunya. She ultimately rejects him. And this leads him to despair. Wha...
Crime and Punishment: The Road to Confession (Video 8)
zhlédnutí 338Před 2 lety
The video frames the rest of the novel, where Raskolnikov confronts three weighty characters who change his life and lead him on the road to confession. One is repulsive. One is accusing. The other is the portrait of human and divine love. This is sketch of things to come.
Crime and Punishment: Raskolnikov as the Napoleonic Man (Video 7)
zhlédnutí 654Před 2 lety
The famous scene where Porfiry lays out Raskolnikov’s underlying hope to be a Napoleonic Man happens in part 3, section 5. Before meeting Porfiry, Raskolnikov had three different psychological stances: he wanted to get away with the crime whenever he was confronted with accusations; he wanted to confess whenever he was alone; and he wanted to serve something larger than himself when that chance...
Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment: Raskolnikov's Personal History (Vid 6)
zhlédnutí 476Před 2 lety
Concerning Part III of the novel, this video focuses on laying out the personal history a timeline, really whereby Raskolnikov came to embrace radical ideas. We learn this history from his mother and sister, who arrive in Petersburg at the outset of Part III. His mother asks Razumikhin: “what are his likes and dislikes? Is he always so irritable? What are his wishes and, so to speak, his dreams...
Houellebecq, Atomised: The Lost Kingdom (Video 2)
zhlédnutí 822Před 2 lety
Houellebecq, Atomised: The Lost Kingdom (Video 2)
Houellebecq, Atomised: The Problem of Modern Decadence (Video 1)
zhlédnutí 2,6KPřed 2 lety
Houellebecq's novels depict the effects of neoliberal economics on national environments. His novels depict the effects of the sexual revolution on the relations between the sexes. Many people are disaffected by both of these movements-the politics of global unity through the free market and the politics of diversity through the attempt to deconstruct the family. Houellebecq takes their claims ...
Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment 5: Raskolnikov's Complexity (Part 2, Sections 6-7)
zhlédnutí 440Před 3 lety
Raskolnikov walks through the town, and sees Marmeladov get killed. This gives his life new purpose and this gets into a mood to try and get away with it. But can he keep that up? t seems not.
Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment 4: Confused and Modern Men (Part 2, Sections 1-5)
zhlédnutí 439Před 3 lety
We go on a tour of town with Raskolnikov as he goes through town. There is the humanist Razhumikin, Luzhin, and Marmeladov (again). Raskolnikov hates the world, but also finds a purpose, but is it too late for him?
Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment 3:Opportunity and Motive for Murder (Part 1, Sections 5-7)
zhlédnutí 470Před 3 lety
Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment 3:Opportunity and Motive for Murder (Part 1, Sections 5-7)
Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment 2: Love and the Modern in Raskolnikov (Part 1, Sections 1-4)
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Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment 2: Love and the Modern in Raskolnikov (Part 1, Sections 1-4)
Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment 1: Ideology and Conscience
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Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment 1: Ideology and Conscience
Dostoevsky's Demons 16: Conclusion and Summary or The Dead Bodies and the Eclipse of Hope
zhlédnutí 1,1KPřed 3 lety
Dostoevsky's Demons 16: Conclusion and Summary or The Dead Bodies and the Eclipse of Hope
Dostoevsky's Demons 15: Stepan's Conversion (Part 3, Chapter 7)
zhlédnutí 716Před 3 lety
Dostoevsky's Demons 15: Stepan's Conversion (Part 3, Chapter 7)
Orwell, 1984 Part 1. The System is the Story. (Video 2)
zhlédnutí 195Před 3 lety
Orwell, 1984 Part 1. The System is the Story. (Video 2)
Orwell, 1984 Part 3 and Conclusion. The
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Orwell, 1984 Part 3 and Conclusion. The
Orwell, 1984. Part 2 (Video 3) The Private Basis for Rebellion
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Orwell, 1984. Part 2 (Video 3) The Private Basis for Rebellion
Orwell, 1984. Introduction. What Socialism is and What is at Stake in 1984
zhlédnutí 466Před 3 lety
Orwell, 1984. Introduction. What Socialism is and What is at Stake in 1984
Dostoevsky's Demons 14: The Murder of Shatov
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Dostoevsky's Demons 14: The Murder of Shatov
Dostoevsky's Demons 13: Stravogin and LIsa, the climax of their Relations (Part 3, Chapter 3).
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Dostoevsky's Demons 13: Stravogin and LIsa, the climax of their Relations (Part 3, Chapter 3).
Dostoevsky's Demons 11: Stepan's Self-Respect and Pytor's Rock Revolution (Part 2.4-10)
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Dostoevsky's Demons 11: Stepan's Self-Respect and Pytor's Rock Revolution (Part 2.4-10)
Dostoevsky's Demons 12: Burning Down the Town (Part 3, Chapters 1-2)
zhlédnutí 833Před 3 lety
Dostoevsky's Demons 12: Burning Down the Town (Part 3, Chapters 1-2)
Dostoevsky's Demons 10: The Anguish of Stravogin (Part 2, 8, 9b [Appendix]).
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Dostoevsky's Demons 10: The Anguish of Stravogin (Part 2, 8, 9b [Appendix]).
Dostoevsky's Demons 9: How the Revolutionaries Exploit Liberals (Part 2, Chapters 4-8)
zhlédnutí 1,4KPřed 3 lety
Dostoevsky's Demons 9: How the Revolutionaries Exploit Liberals (Part 2, Chapters 4-8)

Komentáře

  • @alteredcatscyprus
    @alteredcatscyprus Před 4 dny

    Hahahaha Newsmen are the BS these days. I enjoyed the lectures. New subscriber. Maybe she held the key in his eyes, and it’s why he kept helping her. Hope. If she could have loved him and been faithful in spite of his infirmity, he might have changed his perspective, or he would have had to, which would have nec. brought with it less philosophy and more self examination. So it seems with her he was still open to discovery.

  • @liamfrith2018
    @liamfrith2018 Před 21 dnem

    Think you meant yulia

  • @ZiggysBand
    @ZiggysBand Před 29 dny

    I think Hemingway does find hope in Faith and the Church. There's a lot missing here regarding his own conversion to Catholicism, prayer and healing (he was actually impotent after being wounded in WW1 and found himself healed after extensive prayer.) These themes bleed into TSAR. Also there is some interesting metephor between the matador and the priest celebrating the mass. One donning ritualistic vestments, meeting the eternal (God in the Eucharist and God in nature (the bull)), both intertwined with death as the portal to eternity. Enjoyed this lecture!

  • @AliceLiddell-xb1ob
    @AliceLiddell-xb1ob Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for this series. Very useful. I started to read this novel, but the writing was too dreadful. Incidentally, "Vera" means "faith."

  • @AliceLiddell-xb1ob
    @AliceLiddell-xb1ob Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks. This is so helpful.

  • @Josephus_vanDenElzen
    @Josephus_vanDenElzen Před 2 měsíci

    I read the Maguire translation, and after comparing some of my favorite passages with the Pevear and Garnett, I'm glad I did: the former seems more direct, and it has the "at Tikhon" chapter in the Appendix. Here are equivalent passages of the Maguire (2006), Garnett (1923?), and Pevear (1994) translations: "`Finally, the scene changes again, and before us appears a wild place, a civilized young man wanders among crags, plucking and sucking herbs of some sort, and when a fairy asks him why he is sucking these herbs, he replies that since he feels an overabundance of life within himself, he seeks oblivion and finds it in the juices of these herbs, but that what he desires most of all is to lose his mind as quickly as possible (a desire that is perhaps superfluous)." "At last the scene is changed again; a wilderness appears, and among the rocks there wanders a civilized young man who picks and sucks certain herbs. Asked by a fairy why he sucks these herbs, he answers that, conscious of a superfluity of life in himself, he seeks forgetfulness, and finds it in the juice of these herbs, but that his great desire is to lose his reason at once (a desire possibly superfluous)." "Finally, the scene changes again, and a wild place appears, where a civilized young man wanders among the rocks picking and sucking at some wild herbs, and when a fairy asks him why he is sucking these herbs, he responds that he feels an overabundance of life in himself, is seeking oblivion, and finds it in the juice of these herbs, but that his greatest desire is to lose his reason as quickly as possible (a perhaps superfluous desire)." I let you be the judge of what reads more pleasantly. One prominent difference is that Maguire uses the word "mind" over "reason" which is a GIGANTIC semantic difference. I don't speak Russian and cannot determine the Russian-English accuracy.

  • @markcook8700
    @markcook8700 Před 3 měsíci

    Highly recommend Aaron Renn’s new book Life in the Negative World. As you can see from the people who have chosen to comment on this video, it’s a very unhappy place. Especially considering that they feel that they have won.

  • @marchess286
    @marchess286 Před 3 měsíci

    Another great lecture, including a mention of Vice Admiral James Stockdale and his book, "thoughts of a philosophical fighter pilot".

  • @ajz4052
    @ajz4052 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for the breakdown! Great videos!

  • @KahlessTheUnforgettable
    @KahlessTheUnforgettable Před 3 měsíci

    Ironic, coming from such a feminine ‘man.’

  • @KahlessTheUnforgettable
    @KahlessTheUnforgettable Před 3 měsíci

    You sound like a big ninny and look like a middle aged lesbian. Jackson seems to share your testosterone deficit. EDIT: The most telling thing about you is the “gay accent” you can’t seem to suppress 😂

  • @marchess286
    @marchess286 Před 3 měsíci

    thank you. I read this book many years ago. With these lectures as inspiration and guidance I plan to read it again, aloud, to my wife (we enjoy doing that together).

  • @fabriux
    @fabriux Před 4 měsíci

    Aaaaa! I love this book and this series, please, we (I) need the Sonya's video, it's like top 1 most important relationship whit Rodya, I would be grateful

  • @misterdemocracy3335
    @misterdemocracy3335 Před 4 měsíci

    Why don’t you just say what you really mean? All this crunched language doesn’t appeal to young people who have been lied to their whole lives about what the older generations have in store for us. But I suppose you know that only those who have already bought into your true mission can be proselytized in clear language. I guess the question is, how many of those American values are you willing to compromise in order to bring about these changes because surely you don’t believe in real equality.

  • @fabriux
    @fabriux Před 4 měsíci

    I watched this series of videos and wrote absolutely everything, simply fantastic. Two years later, here I am to enjoy such a great intellect. Thank you!

  • @montanagal6958
    @montanagal6958 Před 4 měsíci

    My third Dostoevsky book as well. I struggled towards the end with the names and relationships. I felt there was something profound that I barely grasped that had to do with Good versus Evil OR God and the Devil. The scene between the cripple and Nikolay seemed to highlight the fact she could see, he was indeed possessed. It was kinda scary because I've seen that in a human being as well. The author also seems prophetic in making the claim, without saying it, what came to pass in Russia was of their own making (of-course could never blame anyone for what happened but Communism is truly evil and how could he know). Which is strangely chilling, due to the similarity of atheism and embracement of immorality here in the US currently. We seem to be sinking in the same direction. It's frightening. Thank-you for your excellent summary and analysis.

  • @yosivin1
    @yosivin1 Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you for this series. I LOVE his last book. I sum the book that it's hard to live life but it's possible and that all will die in the end. One of my favorite autor. Again, thank you very much.

  • @Lehmanbrothersclassof08
    @Lehmanbrothersclassof08 Před 4 měsíci

    Nowhere in chapter 2 does it say that they are planning to stage a suicide. In part xvii Dmitry Sergeich just gets drunk with Verochkas mother and then goes to Verochkas room without explaining how she will be able to escape from her mother. Still Verochka acts as if Dmitry has found a way and becomes cheerful for no apparent reason. I find this part very strange. Please explain.

  • @CurbsideT
    @CurbsideT Před 6 měsíci

    Great video!

  • @NJIT22
    @NJIT22 Před 6 měsíci

    Chernesheshevsky was anarchist

  • @palawanjungledays3099
    @palawanjungledays3099 Před 6 měsíci

    Grazie

  • @palawanjungledays3099
    @palawanjungledays3099 Před 6 měsíci

    Grazie

  • @melanytaveras2878
    @melanytaveras2878 Před 6 měsíci

    She has a child what Sasha is her husband

  • @robertpigott5312
    @robertpigott5312 Před 7 měsíci

    Hem would simply say those that can't write talk.

  • @Mr.X__777
    @Mr.X__777 Před 7 měsíci

    Well done Scott

  • @jackierabinowitz9287
    @jackierabinowitz9287 Před 7 měsíci

    Raskalnikov is a narcissist. Sam Varkin told me so.

  • @ahmed8792
    @ahmed8792 Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you. Your efforts are much appreciated .❤

  • @jackierabinowitz9287
    @jackierabinowitz9287 Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @morbiusprime2043
    @morbiusprime2043 Před 7 měsíci

    I think the child in his dream smiling at him is the core piece to understanding his character

  • @duaneharris6433
    @duaneharris6433 Před 8 měsíci

    What happened to the Sonia video??

  • @emilycurl413
    @emilycurl413 Před 8 měsíci

    that was so helpful! i wanted to start the book but the unfamiliar history was totally daunting. thank you for your concise summation of the historical context!

  • @nobertnghoboko4325
    @nobertnghoboko4325 Před 8 měsíci

    Svidrigailov is misunderstood.

  • @reisslindhardt9441
    @reisslindhardt9441 Před 9 měsíci

    I’ve read Crime and Punishment, and The Brothers Karamazov in the past 4 weeks. Yesterday I picked up The Idiot and Demons. As this is my first time reading through Dostoyevsky (finally, I’m hooked!) I’ve been doing careful preparation for each novel so I can get the most out of it as possible. I will be re-reading these throughout my life no doubt, but I feel like these novels demand a certain level of preparation. Anyways, I wasn’t finding many good introductions to Demons until I found this video. I’m taking notes right now, and I’m going to assimilate them over the next day or two, and then dive into Demons. Thank you very much, Scott.

  • @marchess286
    @marchess286 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @MartySarmaidoff
    @MartySarmaidoff Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you. These are very useful to clarify these rather dense chapters. You've helped spot quite a few things I'd missed.

  • @cakesodakid7201
    @cakesodakid7201 Před 10 měsíci

    You sound extremely ignorant

  • @RAPamme-ih8bm
    @RAPamme-ih8bm Před 11 měsíci

    You pronounce his surname as Stoweepin.

  • @Whatever_Happy_People
    @Whatever_Happy_People Před 11 měsíci

    Love your video's peace

  • @Whatever_Happy_People
    @Whatever_Happy_People Před 11 měsíci

    Ment please

  • @Whatever_Happy_People
    @Whatever_Happy_People Před 11 měsíci

    Hullo do you have a video on the idiot and the house of the dead plrasr?

  • @clemfarley7257
    @clemfarley7257 Před rokem

    Your series on Demons was great. This was terrific, too.

  • @clemfarley7257
    @clemfarley7257 Před rokem

    Wonderful

  • @jellybeanz1989
    @jellybeanz1989 Před rokem

    I like your analysis, however i think you the mistake you and many others do is to use this novel to somehow validate your political beliefs that the Russian revolution was all negative (because communism = bad) when what was before, the zarist russian empire, was likely much worse. Of course the soviet union took some weird turns with Stalin, but the revolution itself was the best thing that could happen at the time. The idea that Dostoevskij was actually talking about events that were to happen 50 years later is ludicrous. The right way to see the novel is more universally about human nature and the downfall into political fanatism and loyalism to an ideology, which can easily be applied anywhere from n4zi germany as well as todays neoliberal/ woke establishment as well.

  • @dethkon
    @dethkon Před rokem

    I’m really interested in the author (I can never spell his name). Good video.

  • @clemfarley7257
    @clemfarley7257 Před rokem

    Great videos

  • @clemfarley7257
    @clemfarley7257 Před rokem

    Very good.

  • @clemfarley7257
    @clemfarley7257 Před rokem

    This series is terrific.

  • @clemfarley7257
    @clemfarley7257 Před rokem

    Absolutely terrific.

  • @JoeySchmoey_
    @JoeySchmoey_ Před rokem

    This was a great series. Would you consider doing a video over the woman question in this book?

  • @Zayceofspades
    @Zayceofspades Před rokem

    I love these, i feel like ive grown a connection with the past students especially the lady coughing every now and then Id also came into this book with alot of hostility as alot of it didnt come together for me ultimately causing me a distain toward the author but these lectures have made me see how great the book and author is/were