M. E. Bradford
Author
1934 – 1993
Who was M. E. Bradford?
Melvin E. "Mel" Bradford was a conservative political commentator and professor of literature at the University of Dallas.
Bradford is seen as a leading figure of the paleoconservative wing of the conservative movement. He died just as the term paleoconservative was being coined and preferred the term traditional conservative. In his preface to Reactionary Imperative, he wrote "Reaction is a necessary term in the intellectual context we inhabit in the twentieth century because merely to conserve is sometimes to perpetuate what is outrageous."
Bradford's conservatism was rooted within the heritage and traditions of the American South. Although some have argued that he was actually from the Southwest, Bradford would take issue with such a delineation of Texas—one of the original "Pre-Sumter 7" members of the Old Confederacy—from "the South". Regardless, he always saw both his beloved Texas and himself as part of the greater Southern cultural milieu. He studied at Vanderbilt and wrote his doctoral thesis under the Southern Agrarian and Fugitive Poet Donald Davidson, and thus was admitted to the succession of this movement to recover the Southern tradition.
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- Born
- May 8, 1934
Fort Worth - Also known as
- Mel Bradford
- Nationality
- United States of America
- Profession
- Education
- Vanderbilt University
- Died
- Mar 3, 1993
Midland
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
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