The Return of the Distributist Critique: From Belloc to Berry

Excerpt

In 2012 Wendell Berry delivered the National Endowment for the Humanities' prestigious Jefferson Lecture. While other recent lecturers steered clear of controversial topics, the cantankerous farmer-poet from Kentucky issued a scathing critique of “corporate industrialism” and an impassioned plea for the “cause of stable, restorative, locally adapted economies of mostly family-sized farms, ranches, shops and trades.”1 “Family-sized” is the key word for Berry. He hopes to re-embed the economy in society, and thus to at least partially recover an older understanding of economy “in its original sense” as oikonomia or “household management.”2 Just as a healthy household is built upon…

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