The Return of the Distributist Critique: From Belloc to Berry

Télos 2014 (166):166-173 (2014)
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Abstract

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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