What are some essential texts of political history and philosophy that pol can recommend me? I'm a graduate student...

What are some essential texts of political history and philosophy that pol can recommend me? I'm a graduate student, soon to be a history teacher to zoomers and I'm building up my personal library. I'm interested in both original texts as well as contemporary analyses.

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The Republic
The Prince
The leviathan
On the genealogy of morals
The federalist papers
Democracy in America
The poverty of historicism
The open society and it’s enemies
Anarchy state and utopia
The end of history and the last man

Everything you need to fight leftist groupthink in one list

Durant's The Story of a Philosophy as a primer

Thus spoke Zarathustra is pretty interesting

I've read this one already.
I've read most of these but I'll check out the ones I haven't.

I'm actually just finishing up Will Durants entire anthology, superb writing.

The Bible.

Since no one is contributing I'll add my current reading lists, including those I've already read.

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I can't believe you've read this many books without killing somebody.

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I haven't read them all yet, but I mean to. Thank you for your contribution.

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>Actually read all this

If anything you should be telling US about essential reading.

There was a book in the US Congress library that got stolen. I forget its name, it was written in like the 1700s or something. I think "Satan" was in the title of the book. It was in the official records of the library index but it got removed from the Congressional library of the White house.
Wish I could remember its name.

Imperium by Yockey

That's my reading list user, I haven't actually read ALL of those yet. I'm working on it though. I'm building a physical library, getting hard cover used books for super cheap. I've probably read about a third of the books I listed.

>
"Legions of Satan" (1785)

Apparently it was 1781 so I'm not sure.

Would be cool if you did, would be cool to know how many people here actually do or even have in general.

I hope to getting around to reading at least some of them at some point, but I'd like someone to tell me what actually lies at the end of reading them all in terms of political worldview and whether you are somehow more "qualified" or savy about the art of politics/more capable of innovative philosophic thought or if you "just" know the subject in far more extensive detail the way a historian could list off a shit-ton of facts and figures about the roman empire which are interesting in their own right, but a lay-person can still get a pretty good understanding of what the empire was like and what sort of historical significance and ramifications it has with only a relative fraction of the knowledge.

Don't forget to take notes. In the future you won't remember shit about a book you read five years ago, and referencing notes is much faster than rereading an entire book. I made this mistake when I started reading again.

mein kampf is delusional bullshit, read some "also sprach zarathustra" for real redpills

The Epic of Gilgamesh is an important read too but the lists you've provided are pretty great.

Isn't this also some kooky Bible from Poland or northern Italy or whatever?

I'm not a very eloquent writer myself, so I'll just post this quote by my boy William Durant to answer your comment:
>"Are there any special ways of acquiring a large perspective? Yes. First, by living perceptively; so the farmer, faced with a fateful immensity day after day, may become patient and wise. Secondly, by studying things in space through science; partly in this way Einstein became wise. Thirdly, by studying events in time through history. "May my son study history," said Napoleon, "for it is the only true philosophy, the only true psychology;" thereby we learn both the nature and the possibilities of man. The past is not dead; it is the sum of the factors operating in the present. The present is the past rolled up into a moment for action; the past is the present unraveled in history for our understanding."

The picture of the big book is some bible pretty sure its in Sweden now.

Haha, I actually made the same mistake myself. I've had to go back and reread some stuff and add proper notes so that I can better reference materials.

Codex Gigas (just checked). There's a german documentary YouTube recommended several days ago which I still need to watch, why you mentioning it?

Because its a book and this thread is about books.

The Dunciad by Alexander Pope.
Probably the earliest comprehensive take down of many enlightenment-liberal ideas that borders on prophetic of much of the craziness (and stupidity - hence "dunce") in the modern world. Interesting because Pope originally embraced much of it.

Good quote

Walt Whitman alongside the declaration of Independence. Not his meme works but the souly posey of America, such as "On Occupations"

Sadly I don't think there's been a yank bard at his level to this day.

I have a thing for the American Romantics. Emerson et al. There's something in them that gets you fired up for American principles that doesn't come out in hard history books and philosophy

Anyone got any good practical books on tools or skills or anything of that nature.

Weininger's Sex & Character

Read it...

Imperium: The Philosophy of History and Politics by Francis Parker Yockey

The suicide of Europe - PRINCE MICHEL STURDZA

[

Read Solzhenitsyn to learn about the Soviet system and gulags. Leftists hate his work.

>Weininger's Sex & Character
>The suicide of Europe - PRINCE MICHEL STURDZA

Thank you. I haven't heard of these before.

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>Solzhenitsyn
Thanks, I've added his abridged volume to my list.

you're a fucking graduate student and you can't figure out literature ?? just kill yourself before you make people even dumber , a blind man can't teach you to paint.

Check out the Anti-Humans too.

Those wacky romanians really crank out good reactionary books.

How about you read the thread before commenting. This is why we need better educators in the US, so we have less of you.

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Also the City of God and Confessions by St Augustine. Extremely formative for later Western thinking.

Discourse on Voluntary Servitude, or the Against-One by Étienne de La Boétie

Nice contribution

Guys post the fucking thumbnails of the book not the titles for fucks sake.
This is an image board.

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this adequately sums it up

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>What is copy & paste

Fucking degenerate board etiquette you fucking commoner.
I came here to judge books by their cover.

I know this is a book thread but I still recommend the BBC series Civilisation. It's done more to frame my mind around history and culture than decades of school.

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POL BOOKS

Approximately 520 GB of PDFs

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5
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A few dead links and some wacko occult books, but a lot of gold in the above too.

Here's some nice extra.

Jow Forums books
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/christian/ books
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withurwe.com/downloads/Withur_We_by_Matthew_Bruce_Alexander.pdf

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If you have even a cursory understanding of various philosophies, "Twilight of the Idols" WILL fuck your shit up.

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Based. But only the Old Testament.

>The open society and it’s enemies
>The list in general
This HAS to be bait. You do realize why Soros named his organization the "Open Society", right?

It cannot be denied that these books are noteworthy but they are "leftism" incarnate.

>The Republic
redpilled

>The Prince
cynical, possibly semi-satirical, but inherently satanic and evil. Read Frederick the Great's refutation.

>The leviathan
bluepilled, evil. "The materialization of the techno-satanic totalitarian state, i.e. the Leviathan"

>On the genealogy of morals
pass

>The federalist papers
If only they could see the fruits of their autistic scribbling now.

>Democracy in America
semi-redpilled

>The poverty of historicism
dunno, don't care.

>The open society and it’s enemies
Literally George Soros's favorite book

>Anarchy state and utopia
"Liberal tries and fails to refute anarcho-capitalism, a more extreme, but ultimately more consistent variant of liberalism"

>The end of history and the last man
Fuck you.

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Thats antithetical.

You don't need to read books to destroy leftist groupthink

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Perhaps, but you need to be smart and patient to destroy their leaders.

Get a good translation of Solzhenitsyns 200 years together.

books are helpful. But most of them only teach to fear. The only thing they are useful for is learning more about your enemy, but what good does that do if you're not actually preparing for action? Instruction manuals are my favorite books cuz you can build shit with them for example

Factual and heterosexual

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Evola
Ted Kaczynski
Gulag Archipelago
Culture of Critique
On Jews and their lies

Currently a zoomer in undergrad
Since I went to a private school I had a good entry into Western lit (read accessible stuff like the Odyssey but also dabbled in Plato and Aristotle). Now in college I've gone all the way in, since I have the means and motivation now surrounded by enemies and with all their resources at my disposal.
The essential philosophy/poli-sci/western literature
>Iliad and Odyssey
>Plato - anything he wrote, really, but Timaeus and Republic are good
>Aristotle - Also really anything, but Nicomachean Ethics is probably most important
>Thucydides - Peloponnesian War
>Herodotus - Histories
>Caesar - Gallic War
>Livy's Histories
>Aeneid
>Augustine - must read both City of God and Confessions, these works were monumental in the Middle Ages and development of Christianity
>Boethius - Consolation of Philosophy
>Dante - the Divine Comedy (read the whole thing, it's a fucking joke that people only read Inferno and then skip the rest)
That's what I would say is essential foundational reading to understand anything about history. Feel free to add anything, my knowledge of literature is really best only from antiquity through the middle ages
>t. zoomer Classics major

bump this read for more recommendations