“My Early Life” serves a key political purpose for modern democracies, recovering a vision of nobility and political greatness for young readers. At the same time, this rich text can serve as a point of departure on an even narrower path of human excellence discovered by Socrates, whose students included statesmen and poets in the ancient agora—and a young British cavalry officer in the unlikely setting of Bangalore. The post “My Early Life”: Churchill’s Recovery of Aristocratic V...| The Churchill Project – Hillsdale College
Listed in chronological order by date of first publication are works generally considered to be books (rather than pamphlets or leaflets), together with numbers assigned by the Cohen Bibliography. Included are collections of speeches and derivative works from previously published books. We have also provided links to discussions of certain titles by The Churchill Project. The post Books Written Entirely by Winston S. Churchill appeared first on The Churchill Project - Hillsdale College.| The Churchill Project – Hillsdale College
The Stapledon novel influenced Churchill’s alarming forecast “Fifty Years Hence.” Did it forecast even farther ahead?| The Churchill Project - Hillsdale College
“It has no theme” was directed at more than puddings; in a more serious sense, one of his applications has a certain modern ring.| The Churchill Project - Hillsdale College