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The Evola Foundation
The Evola Foundation was founded in 1974, and is the official organization for disseminating the Italian philosopher's thoughts. This site features a bibliography, scholarly analysis, and more. Italian translation.
Kshatriya: Julius Evola: Tradition and Philosophy
An archive of rare documents by notable Traditionalist philosophers, including Julius Evola, Gottfried von Bouillon, Hans F. K. Günther, Edgar Julius Jung, Charles Maurras, Yukio Mishima, Moeller van den Bruck, Plinio Correa de Oliveira, Carl Schmitt, and Martin Schwarz. German translation.
Julius Evola: Revolt Against the Modern World
An excerpt from Revolt Against the Modern World (1934), the influential parapolitical and magical study by Julius Evola. French translation. "Where the Tradition preserved all its force, the dynasty or the succession of the crowned kings constituted an axis of light and of eternity in time, affirmed the victorious presence of the supramonde in the world, of the "Olympian" component which transfigures the element demonic of the demonstrations and confers a significance higher than all that is State, nation and race. And even among the lowest layers, the hierarchical link created by a conscious and virile devotion was used as way of bringing together and participation."
Julius Evola Text Archive
Part of the Kshatriya archive. English, French, Spanish and Italian translations.
Hitler and the Secret Societies
This Il Conciliatore article (1971) by Baron Julis Evola explains the common misunderstandings about National Socialist Germany and initiatory parapolitics. Evola offers some compelling analysis of why the Thule Society, Alfred Rosenberg, Hyperborea, Cathars and Heinrich Himmler's Reichsfuhrer-SS have been mythologized by the occult community. "National Socialism's concern with runes, the ancient Nordic-Germanic letter-signs, must be regarded as purely symbolic, rather like the Fascist use of certain Roman symbols, and without any esoteric significance."
On the Secret of Degeneration
This Deutsches Volkstum article (1938) by Baron Julius Evola unearths a worldview older than the Rationalist perspective. "For us, "Tradition" is the victorious and creative presence in the world of that which is "not of this world," i.e., of the Spirit, understood as a power that is mightier than any merely human or material one."
Against the Neo-Pagans
This Grundrisse article (1942) by Baron Julius Evola is a polemical attack on the early Neo-Pagan revival in Europe. "One should consider, then, that "paganism" is a fundamentally tendentious and artificial concept that scarcely corresponds to the historical reality of what the pre-Christian world always was in its normal manifestations, apart from a few decadent elements and aspects that derived from the degenerate remains of older cultures."
Julius Evola - The Architect of Terror
This Trend Online article reveals how Julius Evola's philosophy and memes have influenced Italian "revolutionary cells", Patrick Harrington's "Third Way", Italy's National Front Party, and the British National Party. Also includes an excellent profile of Julius Evola's cultural impact. German translation. "The name Julius Evola is not particularly well-known, although it has large, even increasing influence. It is the mainspring of violence, which applies with extreme rights as theory, and an inspiration for activists."
Encyclopedia Britannica: Oswald Spengler
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry for Oswald Spengler, the German political theorist, whose two-volume Decline of the West (London: G. Alleen and Unwin, 1926-1928; 1919) influenced the National Socialist worldview and Arnold Toynbee's history of civilizations. Julius Evola collected and translated Spengler's political theory into Italian.
Encyclopedia Britannica: Tristan Tzara
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry for Tristan Tzara, the Romanian poet who helped found the Dada art movement. Julius Evola knew Tzara.
Encyclopedia Britannica: Dada
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry for Dada, a nihilistic art movement that flourished during the 1920s. Julius Evola participated in early demonstrations, and became the movement's Italian propagandist.
Encyclopedia Britannica: Futurism
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry for Futurism, the influential 20th century art movement that became prominent in Italy. Futurism's exaltation of change and dynamism (life-worship) influenced Julius Evola's political philosophy.
Encyclopedia Britannica: Filippo Tommaso Marinetti
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry for Marinetti, the ideological founder of Futurism, and a key intellectual influence for Julius Evola.
Encyclopedia Britannica: Fascism
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry for fascism explains the cultural roots, history, social impact, and memetic variations of this metapolitical philosophy.
Encyclopedia Britannica: Mircea Eliade
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry for Mircea Eliade, an influential historian of religion and symbolic rituals. Julius Evola was in contact with Eliade throughout their lives.
Encyclopedia Britannica: Benito Mussolini
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry for Benito Mussolini offers insights into Italian dictator Benito Mussolini's administration (1922-1943).
Encyclopedia Britannica: Friedrich Nietzsche
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry for Friedrich Nietzsche outlines the German philosopher's life, controversies and worldview. Nietzsche was a key influence on Julius Evola's youth.
Fascism a la Mode
This Harpers magazine article (October 1997) by David Zaine Mairowitz gives background on Jean-Marie Le Pen's far-right National Front Party, which has been influenced by Julius Evola's political theory.
Italian Life Under Fascism: Selections from the Fry Collection
This University of Wisconsin-Madison archive (1998) collated by John Tedeschi, William F. "Jack" Fry, and John Tortorice, offers insights into Italy's cultural and sociopolitical climate under Benito Mussolini's regime.
The Great Doomsayer
This National Interest article (June 1997) by Neil McInnes examines the fate of Oswald Spengler's worldview. Helpful reading to understand the political climate that Julius Evola lived in, and many of the observations here are also relevant to Evola's philosophy. "Spengler's Decline led directly to a new wouldbe science, the comparative sociology of civilizations, and it animated the twentieth century's avid passion for philosophies of history, which everyone affects to disdain but which, observed Raymond Aron, "nevertheless exercise an influence on the historical conscience of our day." Above all, it inspired a mood, a feeling, a pathos: that of living uneasily through the end of an old, tired, dying culture."
British National Party
The BNP's sociopolitical policies are anti-European Union, anti-immigrant, and fascist. They vow to fight "anti-white racism." They have "stolen" several of Julius Evola's ideas.
National Front
France's National Front Party has "stolen" Julius Evola's political philosophy, and used it to justify their anti-European Union agenda.
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