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'''Oikophobia'''<ref>Roger Scruton, ''England and the Need for Nations'', (London: Civitas, 2004), pp.33-38 and for the excerpt of Scruton's definition [http://www.civitas.org.uk/pdf/cs49-8.pdf]</ref>, coined by the British philosopher [[Roger Scruton]], is here used as a non-clinical description of an 'anti-culture' prevalent among Western artists and intellectuals. It is a combination of: |
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'''Oikophobia''' is a term used in the nineteenth century to describe a desire (particularly by the English) to leave home and travel,<ref>{{cite book|last=Southey|first=Robert|title=Letters from England, Volume 1|year=1808|publisher=David Longworth|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=cr4sAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA157&dq=Oikophobia&hl=en&ei=XEfeTP28OMbMhAfdrpm7DQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CEIQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=Oikophobia&f=false|authorlink=Robert Southey|page=311}}</ref> or, in clinical contexts, an aversion to home surroundings ("fear of household appliances, equipment, bathtubs, household chemicals, and other common objects in the home").<ref>Ronald Manual Doctor, Ada P. Kahn, Christine A. Adamec. ''The encyclopedia of phobias, fears, and anxieties.'' Third edition. Infobase Publishing, 2008. Page 281.</ref> More recently it was used by the British philosopher [[Roger Scruton]] to mean "the repudiation of inheritance and home,"<ref>Roger Scruton, ''England and the Need for Nations'', (London: Civitas, 2004), pp.33-38 and for the excerpt of Scruton's definition [http://www.civitas.org.uk/pdf/cs49-8.pdf]</ref> as "a stage through which the adolescent mind normally passes."<ref>Roger Scruton, ''A Political Philosophy'', p. 24.</ref> |
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'''oikos''' - from the Greek meaning a “house,” “family,” “people,” or “nation” |
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== Scruton's usage == |
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– Encyclopaedia Britannica |
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⚫ | In his book, ''Roger Scruton: Philosopher on Dover Beach'', Mark Dooley describes oikophobia as centered within the Western academic establishment on "both the common culture of the West, and the old educational curriculum that sought to transmit its humane values." This disposition has grown out of, for example, the writings of |
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and |
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'''-phobia'''<br> |
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(combining form) |
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extreme or irrational fear or dislike of a specified thing or group |
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-Webster's Dictionary |
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The term also occasionally appears in psychology with the more literal sense of a fear of home. |
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Scruton defines it as "the repudiation of inheritance and home," and refers to it as "a stage through which the adolescent mind normally passes."<ref>Roger Scruton, ''A Political Philosophy'', p. 24.</ref> |
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⚫ | An extreme and immoderate aversion to the sacred and the thwarting of the connection of the sacred to the culture of the West appears to be the underlying motif of oikophobia; and not the substitution of Judeo-Christianity by another coherent system of belief. The [[paradox]] of the oikophobe seems to be that any opposition directed at the theological and cultural [[tradition]] of the West is to be encouraged even if it is "significantly more parochial, exclusivist, patriarchal, and ethnocentric".<ref>Mark Dooley, Roger Scruton: Philosopher on Dover Beach (Continuum 2009), p. 78</ref> |
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== Background == |
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According to Scruton, culture is the ethical transmission "how to feel" passed down from one generation to the next. Virtue is taught through imitation of the heroes, gods and ancestors not by mere copying but through the imagination and "moving with them" which high culture provides. The repudiation of a common tradition blocks the individual's path to membership in the "original experience of the community". Instead of apprehending spiritual and intellectual [[received wisdom]] as an epiphany the 'anti-culture' of repudiation produces mere nihilism, irony and false gods.<ref>Roger Scruton, ''Culture Counts'' (Encounter Books, 2007), pp.36-9</ref> Of the Biblical [[Abraham]], Hegel wrote: |
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<blockquote> |
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He was a stranger on earth, a stranger to the soil and to men alike. Among men he always was and remained a foreigner, yet not so far removed from them and independent of them that he needed to know nothing of them whatever, to have nothing whatever to do with them. The country was populated beforehand that in his travels he continually stumbled on men already previously united in small tribes. He entered into no such ties . . . He steadily persisted in cutting himself off from others, and he made this conspicuous by a physical peculiarity imposed on himself and his posterity. <ref>G.W.F. Hegel, The Spirit of Christianity, in'' On Christianity: Early Theological Writings,'' T.M. Knox (trans.) (Gloucester, Mass.: Peter Smith, 1970), p. 186</ref> |
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</blockquote> |
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The idea of family, home, ancestors and the sacred as inter-connected and essential to the individual's path to membership in his culture may well be universal. In his autobiography and testimonial to spiritual awakening, Russell Means wrote about his experience as a young Native American who rediscovered his "home" in his traditions as an Indian and not as a member of the white man's tribe: "In that humiliating moment, I came to realize how white people look upon us: We're not real human beings, we don't exist, we have no care, no rights, no sensibilities. We're tourist attractions."<ref>Russell Means, ''Where White Men Fear to Tread'' (St. Martin's Press, 1995) p. 111</ref> |
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Russell Means's rejection of the dominant culture resulted in his acceptance of the sacredness of his own ancestors rituals. A far different response emerges from Karl Marx towards Western Judeo-Christian culture. Marx describes alienation, or at least that of the "workers," as even more estranged than Abraham and Means: "Just as in religion the spontaneous activity of the human imagination, of the human brain and the human heart, operates independently of the individual–that is, operates on him as an alien, divine or diabolical activity—so is the worker's activity not his spontaneous activity. It belongs to another; it is the loss of his self." <ref>Karl Marx, ''Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844,'' p. 111.</ref> |
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<blockquote> |
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. . . the object produced by labour, its product, now stands opposed to it as an alien being, as a power independent of the producer. The product of labour is labour which has been embodied in an object and turned into a physical thing; this product is an objectification of labour. ... So much does the performance of work appear as devaluation that the worker is devalued to the point of starvation.<ref>Marx, ''Economic,'' p. 13</ref> |
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</blockquote> |
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It would appear 165 years later that the workers are no longer so alienated.<ref>Iowahawk, The Great Midwest[http://iowahawk.typepad.com/iowahawk/the_great_midwest/]</ref> Curiously, the failure of communism in no way halted the underlying estrangement of Western intellectuals and artists.<ref>This relevant passage is worth quoting, from Roger Scruton, ''An Intelligent Person's Guide to Culture'' (St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Indiana, 2000) p 124: "The Russian Orthodox Church abounds in escape routes for men, and with honours and privileges which will reward their loyalty. Take away faith, however, and those privileges are no longer consoling. It is then that the dreamer becomes dangerous. Unable to enter society, and without the vision of another world that would prompt him to accept the imperfections of this one, he nurses an unstaunchable wound of resentment. His 'right divine to govern wrong' goes unrecognised, by a world that gives more credit to material than intellectual power. At the same time, he instinctively identifies with the poor, the oppressed, the misfits - those at the bottom of society, who are the living proof of its injustice. He turns against religion with the rage of a disappointed lover, and refuses to recognise the virtue of any earthly compromise. There arises the peculiar frame of mind of the exalted nihilist - a posture brilliantly described by Turgenev and Conrad, and exemplified in virtually all the characters who instigated the Bolshevik ''coup d'etat''."</ref> Their fellow citizens take on the aspect of somewhat repellent tourist attractions. The idea of the sacred home is absent. A cold gaze in a godless world does not help lead the individual to the ancestors, and the sacred makes no divine appearance.<ref>Jean Baudrillard, ''America'' (Verso, 1989)</ref> The visible world can now only exist by the operation of "objectification" through the intellect:<blockquote> |
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There is nothing real outside ourselves; there is nothing real except the coincidence of a sensation and an individual mental tendency. Be it far from us to throw any doubts upon the existence of the objects which impress our senses; but, rationally speaking, we can only experience certitude in respect of the images which they produce in the mind.<ref>Herschel B. Chipp, ''Theories of Modern Art'', Albert Gleizes and Jean Metzinger, from Cubism, 1912 (University of California Press, 1968) pp. 207-213</ref> |
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</blockquote> |
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⚫ | In his book, ''Roger Scruton: Philosopher on Dover Beach'', Mark Dooley describes oikophobia as centered within the Western academic establishment on "both the common culture of the West, and the old educational curriculum that sought to transmit its humane values." This disposition has grown out of, for example, the writings of Jacques Derrida and of Michel Foucault's "assault on 'bourgeois' society result[ing] in an 'anti-culture' that took direct aim at holy and sacred things, condemning and repudiating them as oppressive and power-ridden."<ref>Dooley, p. 78</ref><blockquote> |
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Derrida is a classic oikophobe in so far as he repudiates the longing for home that the Western theological, legal, and literary traditions satisfy. . . . Derrida's deconstruction seeks to block the path to this 'core experience' of membership, preferring instead a rootless existence founded 'upon nothing.'<ref>Dooley, p. 83</ref></blockquote> |
Derrida is a classic oikophobe in so far as he repudiates the longing for home that the Western theological, legal, and literary traditions satisfy. . . . Derrida's deconstruction seeks to block the path to this 'core experience' of membership, preferring instead a rootless existence founded 'upon nothing.'<ref>Dooley, p. 83</ref></blockquote> |
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⚫ | An extreme aversion to the sacred and the thwarting of the connection of the sacred to the culture of the West |
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== Usage == |
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[[James Taranto]], ''Oikophobia, Why the liberal elite finds Americans revolting'', Wall Street Journal, August 27, 2010: <blockquote>If you think it's offensive for a Muslim group to exploit the 9/11 atrocity, you're an anti-Muslim bigot and un-American to boot. It is a claim so bizarre, so twisted, so utterly at odds with common sense that it's hard to believe anyone would assert it except as some sort of dark joke. Yet for the past few weeks, it has been put forward, apparently in all seriousness, by those who fancy themselves America's best and brightest, from the mayor of New York all the way down to Peter Beinart.<ref>{{cite news|last=Taranto |first=James |url=http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704147804575455523068802824.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_MIDDLETopOpinion |title=Oikophobia - WSJ.com |publisher=Online.wsj.com |date= 2010-08-27|accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref></blockquote> |
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[[Kuro5hin]]: technology and culture from the trenches, ''Oikophobia; antonym: Xenophobia'', By anaesthetica in anaesthetica's Diary, Thu Feb 05, 2009 at 04:41:05 AM EST: <blockquote>A chronic form of oikophobia has spread through the American universities, in the guise of political correctness, and loudly surfaced in the aftermath of September 11th, to pour scorn on the culture that allegedly provoked the attacks, and to side by implication with the terrorists.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2009/2/5/4415/37866 |title=Oikophobia; antonym: Xenophobia |publisher=kuro5hin.org |date= |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref></blockquote> |
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Eunomia: ''Clearing the East of Christianity: Ignorance, Oikophobia or Alienation from Christianity?'', July 1, 2006 <blockquote>. . . so we are either seeing an outpouring of oikophobia with respect to our Christian brethren, a startling demonstration of American ignorance, or a widespread admission that “we” are not really like the Christians of the Near East but apparently have more in common with their persecutors with whom we unwittingly or knowingly align ourselves.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://larison.org/2006/07/31/clearing-the-east-of-christianity-ignorance-oikophobia-or-alienation-from-christianity/ |title=Eunomia · Clearing the East of Christianity: Ignorance, Oikophobia or Alienation from Christianity? |publisher=Larison.org |date=2006-08-01 |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref></blockquote> |
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2 Blowhards, ''Roger Scruton and Oikophobia'': <blockquote>Scruton also invents a nifty new word -- "oikophobia" -- to fight back against those who use terms like "racism" and "xenophobia" to stifle legitimate discussion of important matters.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.2blowhards.com/archives/2006/06/roger_scruton_a.html |title=Roger Scruton and Oikophobia |publisher=2blowhards.com |date=2006-06-30 |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref></blockquote> |
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Muck and Mystery: ''I'm Late, I'm Late'': June 24, 2006: <blockquote>The recent exposure of U.S. anti-terrorist methods by journalists - though not illegal, immoral or fattening - seems an example of U.S. quasi-leftist, pseudo-intellectual oikophobia. The intellectual neoteny of oikophobics is striking."<ref>{{cite web|author=Posted by back40 at 08:33 PM | culture |url=http://www.garyjones.org/mt/archives/000335.html |title=Muck and Mystery: I'm Late, I'm Late |publisher=Garyjones.org |date=2006-06-24 |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref></blockquote> |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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*[[List of phobias]] |
*[[List of phobias]] |
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*''[[Wanderlust]]'' |
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*[[Allophilia]] |
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*[[Xenophily]] |
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*[[Xenocentrism]] |
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== References == |
== References == |
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*Roger Scruton, ''A Political Philosophy'', pp.23-25:<ref>{{cite web|last=Scruton |first=Roger |url=http://www.continuumbooks.com/authors/details.aspx?AuthorId=145104&BookId=126311 |title=Continuum - Political Philosophy > Roger Scruton |publisher=Continuumbooks.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref> |
*Roger Scruton, ''A Political Philosophy'', pp.23-25:<ref>{{cite web|last=Scruton |first=Roger |url=http://www.continuumbooks.com/authors/details.aspx?AuthorId=145104&BookId=126311 |title=Continuum - Political Philosophy > Roger Scruton |publisher=Continuumbooks.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref> |
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Revision as of 22:46, 18 November 2010
Oikophobia[1], coined by the British philosopher Roger Scruton, is here used as a non-clinical description of an 'anti-culture' prevalent among Western artists and intellectuals. It is a combination of:
oikos - from the Greek meaning a “house,” “family,” “people,” or “nation” – Encyclopaedia Britannica
and
-phobia
(combining form)
extreme or irrational fear or dislike of a specified thing or group
-Webster's Dictionary
The term also occasionally appears in psychology with the more literal sense of a fear of home.
Scruton defines it as "the repudiation of inheritance and home," and refers to it as "a stage through which the adolescent mind normally passes."[2]
An extreme and immoderate aversion to the sacred and the thwarting of the connection of the sacred to the culture of the West appears to be the underlying motif of oikophobia; and not the substitution of Judeo-Christianity by another coherent system of belief. The paradox of the oikophobe seems to be that any opposition directed at the theological and cultural tradition of the West is to be encouraged even if it is "significantly more parochial, exclusivist, patriarchal, and ethnocentric".[3]
Background
According to Scruton, culture is the ethical transmission "how to feel" passed down from one generation to the next. Virtue is taught through imitation of the heroes, gods and ancestors not by mere copying but through the imagination and "moving with them" which high culture provides. The repudiation of a common tradition blocks the individual's path to membership in the "original experience of the community". Instead of apprehending spiritual and intellectual received wisdom as an epiphany the 'anti-culture' of repudiation produces mere nihilism, irony and false gods.[4] Of the Biblical Abraham, Hegel wrote:
He was a stranger on earth, a stranger to the soil and to men alike. Among men he always was and remained a foreigner, yet not so far removed from them and independent of them that he needed to know nothing of them whatever, to have nothing whatever to do with them. The country was populated beforehand that in his travels he continually stumbled on men already previously united in small tribes. He entered into no such ties . . . He steadily persisted in cutting himself off from others, and he made this conspicuous by a physical peculiarity imposed on himself and his posterity. [5]
The idea of family, home, ancestors and the sacred as inter-connected and essential to the individual's path to membership in his culture may well be universal. In his autobiography and testimonial to spiritual awakening, Russell Means wrote about his experience as a young Native American who rediscovered his "home" in his traditions as an Indian and not as a member of the white man's tribe: "In that humiliating moment, I came to realize how white people look upon us: We're not real human beings, we don't exist, we have no care, no rights, no sensibilities. We're tourist attractions."[6]
Russell Means's rejection of the dominant culture resulted in his acceptance of the sacredness of his own ancestors rituals. A far different response emerges from Karl Marx towards Western Judeo-Christian culture. Marx describes alienation, or at least that of the "workers," as even more estranged than Abraham and Means: "Just as in religion the spontaneous activity of the human imagination, of the human brain and the human heart, operates independently of the individual–that is, operates on him as an alien, divine or diabolical activity—so is the worker's activity not his spontaneous activity. It belongs to another; it is the loss of his self." [7]
. . . the object produced by labour, its product, now stands opposed to it as an alien being, as a power independent of the producer. The product of labour is labour which has been embodied in an object and turned into a physical thing; this product is an objectification of labour. ... So much does the performance of work appear as devaluation that the worker is devalued to the point of starvation.[8]
It would appear 165 years later that the workers are no longer so alienated.[9] Curiously, the failure of communism in no way halted the underlying estrangement of Western intellectuals and artists.[10] Their fellow citizens take on the aspect of somewhat repellent tourist attractions. The idea of the sacred home is absent. A cold gaze in a godless world does not help lead the individual to the ancestors, and the sacred makes no divine appearance.[11] The visible world can now only exist by the operation of "objectification" through the intellect:
There is nothing real outside ourselves; there is nothing real except the coincidence of a sensation and an individual mental tendency. Be it far from us to throw any doubts upon the existence of the objects which impress our senses; but, rationally speaking, we can only experience certitude in respect of the images which they produce in the mind.[12]
In his book, Roger Scruton: Philosopher on Dover Beach, Mark Dooley describes oikophobia as centered within the Western academic establishment on "both the common culture of the West, and the old educational curriculum that sought to transmit its humane values." This disposition has grown out of, for example, the writings of Jacques Derrida and of Michel Foucault's "assault on 'bourgeois' society result[ing] in an 'anti-culture' that took direct aim at holy and sacred things, condemning and repudiating them as oppressive and power-ridden."[13]
Derrida is a classic oikophobe in so far as he repudiates the longing for home that the Western theological, legal, and literary traditions satisfy. . . . Derrida's deconstruction seeks to block the path to this 'core experience' of membership, preferring instead a rootless existence founded 'upon nothing.'[14]
Usage
James Taranto, Oikophobia, Why the liberal elite finds Americans revolting, Wall Street Journal, August 27, 2010:
If you think it's offensive for a Muslim group to exploit the 9/11 atrocity, you're an anti-Muslim bigot and un-American to boot. It is a claim so bizarre, so twisted, so utterly at odds with common sense that it's hard to believe anyone would assert it except as some sort of dark joke. Yet for the past few weeks, it has been put forward, apparently in all seriousness, by those who fancy themselves America's best and brightest, from the mayor of New York all the way down to Peter Beinart.[15]
Kuro5hin: technology and culture from the trenches, Oikophobia; antonym: Xenophobia, By anaesthetica in anaesthetica's Diary, Thu Feb 05, 2009 at 04:41:05 AM EST:
A chronic form of oikophobia has spread through the American universities, in the guise of political correctness, and loudly surfaced in the aftermath of September 11th, to pour scorn on the culture that allegedly provoked the attacks, and to side by implication with the terrorists.[16]
Eunomia: Clearing the East of Christianity: Ignorance, Oikophobia or Alienation from Christianity?, July 1, 2006
. . . so we are either seeing an outpouring of oikophobia with respect to our Christian brethren, a startling demonstration of American ignorance, or a widespread admission that “we” are not really like the Christians of the Near East but apparently have more in common with their persecutors with whom we unwittingly or knowingly align ourselves.[17]
2 Blowhards, Roger Scruton and Oikophobia:
Scruton also invents a nifty new word -- "oikophobia" -- to fight back against those who use terms like "racism" and "xenophobia" to stifle legitimate discussion of important matters.[18]
Muck and Mystery: I'm Late, I'm Late: June 24, 2006:
The recent exposure of U.S. anti-terrorist methods by journalists - though not illegal, immoral or fattening - seems an example of U.S. quasi-leftist, pseudo-intellectual oikophobia. The intellectual neoteny of oikophobics is striking."[19]
See also
References
- Roger Scruton, A Political Philosophy, pp.23-25:[20]
- ^ Roger Scruton, England and the Need for Nations, (London: Civitas, 2004), pp.33-38 and for the excerpt of Scruton's definition [1]
- ^ Roger Scruton, A Political Philosophy, p. 24.
- ^ Mark Dooley, Roger Scruton: Philosopher on Dover Beach (Continuum 2009), p. 78
- ^ Roger Scruton, Culture Counts (Encounter Books, 2007), pp.36-9
- ^ G.W.F. Hegel, The Spirit of Christianity, in On Christianity: Early Theological Writings, T.M. Knox (trans.) (Gloucester, Mass.: Peter Smith, 1970), p. 186
- ^ Russell Means, Where White Men Fear to Tread (St. Martin's Press, 1995) p. 111
- ^ Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844, p. 111.
- ^ Marx, Economic, p. 13
- ^ Iowahawk, The Great Midwest[2]
- ^ This relevant passage is worth quoting, from Roger Scruton, An Intelligent Person's Guide to Culture (St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Indiana, 2000) p 124: "The Russian Orthodox Church abounds in escape routes for men, and with honours and privileges which will reward their loyalty. Take away faith, however, and those privileges are no longer consoling. It is then that the dreamer becomes dangerous. Unable to enter society, and without the vision of another world that would prompt him to accept the imperfections of this one, he nurses an unstaunchable wound of resentment. His 'right divine to govern wrong' goes unrecognised, by a world that gives more credit to material than intellectual power. At the same time, he instinctively identifies with the poor, the oppressed, the misfits - those at the bottom of society, who are the living proof of its injustice. He turns against religion with the rage of a disappointed lover, and refuses to recognise the virtue of any earthly compromise. There arises the peculiar frame of mind of the exalted nihilist - a posture brilliantly described by Turgenev and Conrad, and exemplified in virtually all the characters who instigated the Bolshevik coup d'etat."
- ^ Jean Baudrillard, America (Verso, 1989)
- ^ Herschel B. Chipp, Theories of Modern Art, Albert Gleizes and Jean Metzinger, from Cubism, 1912 (University of California Press, 1968) pp. 207-213
- ^ Dooley, p. 78
- ^ Dooley, p. 83
- ^ Taranto, James (2010-08-27). "Oikophobia - WSJ.com". Online.wsj.com. Retrieved 2010-08-30.
- ^ "Oikophobia; antonym: Xenophobia". kuro5hin.org. Retrieved 2010-08-30.
- ^ "Eunomia · Clearing the East of Christianity: Ignorance, Oikophobia or Alienation from Christianity?". Larison.org. 2006-08-01. Retrieved 2010-08-30.
- ^ "Roger Scruton and Oikophobia". 2blowhards.com. 2006-06-30. Retrieved 2010-08-30.
- ^ Posted by back40 at 08:33 PM (2006-06-24). "Muck and Mystery: I'm Late, I'm Late". Garyjones.org. Retrieved 2010-08-30.
{{cite web}}
: Text "culture" ignored (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Scruton, Roger. "Continuum - Political Philosophy > Roger Scruton". Continuumbooks.com. Retrieved 2010-08-30.