Leviathan and Its Enemies
by Samuel T. Francis (2016)
Hardcover, 794 pages
Leviathan and Its Enemies is Samuel T. Francis's magnum opus on political theory and the history of the modern world,
which had been lost to the world after his untimely death in 2005 and is published here for the first time. This edition
includes new introductory and critical essays by Jerry Woodruff, Fran Griffin, and Paul E. Gottfried. In his Introduction,
Jerry Woodruff writes, "Following [James] Burnham, Sam believed a new ruling elite emerged in 20th-century ... the growth
of giant corporations, the expansion of government power and bureaucracy, and the widespread emergence of mass organizations
gave birth to a powerful class of skilled professionals to guide and manage the vast operations of the means of economic
production, which, on a smaller scale, were once in the hands of private entrepreneurs and their families. As a result, the
old ruling bourgeois elite, along with its political and social institutions and its view of society and politics, were
replaced by a new "managerial elite," with a world outlook that set out to remake society according to its own interests,
and which was hostile to any bourgeois remnants in conflict with that project."