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Front Porch Republic

A Dress Code for Democracy

How school uniforms foster a common life in an age of fragmentation.

My Typewriter

I distinctly remember on Christmas morning ...
August 6, 2025

A World Written: A Response to Wendell Berry’s “In Defense of Literacy”

Literacy anchors us to our surroundings and our heritage. It acquaints us with the particulars and holds us in the web of relations.

Old Models

Perhaps the choice not to have a computer is more a choice not to play pretend.

News, Notes, & Podcasts

Jeffrey Bilbro
Newsletter Editor:
Jeffrey Bilbro
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Soft in the Middle: Songs About Middle Age

In this first episode of A Symposium of Popular Songs, we’ll be listening to music about middle age and talking about its various indignities.
August 4, 2025
A Farmer Reading His Paper. Photographed by George W. Ackerman, Coryell County, Texas, September 1931.

The Essay, Jane Greer, and Blue States

Sally Thomas remembers the wry and wonderful formalist poet Jane Greer.
August 2, 2025
A Farmer Reading His Paper. Photographed by George W. Ackerman, Coryell County, Texas, September 1931.

Vonnegut, Jennings, and Road Trips

Grace Russo isn’t impressed with her alma mater’s AI assistant.
July 26, 2025
A Farmer Reading His Paper. Photographed by George W. Ackerman, Coryell County, Texas, September 1931.

Markets, Slop, and Alyosha

Jen Pollock Michel describes what she’s learned while caring for her aging mother.
July 19, 2025
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More Articles

Terrestrial Otherness

Why didn’t Fabre gaze out into the heavens, like Copernicus and Galileo, instead of down at these grotesque little monsters?

Making Men for Others

It turns out that while you can take the man out of the Xaverians, it is more difficult to take the Xaverian out of the man.

Gorgias: Plato’s Guide to Online Discussions

Socrates encounters many of the same rhetorical stunts that we run into on the Internet today.
July 30, 2025

AI is Not Like a Calculator, and Other Conversations Worth Having

We are forgetting about other ways AI may be affecting people close to us, even ourselves.
July 29, 2025

Light Forevermore: The Luminosity of Blood Meridian

Blood and violence and death are on every page; however, trace that which has fallen back to its original height, especially the moment in the barn where all the rough characters are aglow.
July 28, 2025

The Cathedral and the Republic

A republic endures only through the devotion and resolve of an active citizenry.
July 25, 2025

Can I Get a Witness?

The fabled pearly gates may be a noisy place.

Blisters on the Camino de Santiago

I recently learned the most effective cure ever for blisters: iodine. I had no idea; and I bet your mother, like mine, told you to bandage a blister and never, ever drain it. Leave it alone, they say. Put a…

What Was Scattered Was Not Destroyed

Churches aren’t offering peace. They’re optimizing for engagement. And what gets built in the end is impressive. But like all “Babels,” it can’t bear the weight of the human soul.

When the Stranger Becomes the Scourge: Lessons for Localists from Wuthering Heights

In a fragmented age increasingly seduced by the cult of the self, "Wuthering Heights" challenges us to reclaim the difficult virtues that make real community possible.

The Front Porch Republic Curse?

You are probably familiar with the concept of the “Sports Illustrated cover jinx.”

The Localist at the Capitol: A Conversation with Marie Glusenkamp Perez

"I don't particularly call myself an environmentalist. I love the Pinchot National Forest. My specific woods, the land that my family is from..."
July 17, 2025

From the Archive

Narnia Against the Machine: Deep Magic for the Modern Age

Witnessing the ascendancy of the Machine, Lewis understood what was at stake. He watched this ideology sweep across his society and take hold in its schools, and he keenly felt…

Spiritual Secession: A Conversation with Paul Kingsnorth

" None of your readers need me to tell them that the useful work is practical, particular, small and careful: to get away from screens as much as we can, get…
November 12, 2021

Cultivating the Skills that Freedom Requires in Matthew Crawford’s Why We Drive: Toward a Philosophy of the Open Road

Human driving requires unending mutual predictions and constant accommodations for each other. It is in such experiences that we end up with something meaningful for life in the physical world…
October 7, 2020

The Whole Hog

Alexandria, VA They say you can’t judge a book by its cover, but you can sometimes tell how the book’s designers wanted the book to be judged at first glance.…
July 15, 2009

Working with Words

Our relationship was still in its early swoon when Nate came to pick me up from work one night. He was so obviously excited to see me that even my…