Search for: "Catherine Victorian" Results 1 - 12 of 12
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15 Oct 2020, 6:30 am by ernst
As a Carnegie Fellow, he is currently working on a book on a history of rebellious lawyering and decolonizationCatherine Evans: “Civilization as Sanity in the Victorian Empire” Catherine L. [read post]
1 Nov 2021, 7:00 am by Mitra Sharafi
Catherine Evans (University of Toronto) has published Unsound Empire: Civilization and Madness in Late-Victorian Law with Yale University Press. [read post]
16 May 2021, 10:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
 [We share the following announcement.]The Centre for History and Economics (Harvard University and University of Cambridge) is hosting two seminars on legal history over the next month: Economic Law & Histories of Economic Life on Tuesday, May 18, 2021, 10 am EDT (Boston) and 3 pm BST (London), with Fei-Hsien Wang (Indiana University), Pirates and Publishers: A Social History of Copyright in Modern China (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2020) and Lionel Bently (University of… [read post]
22 Jun 2020, 9:50 pm by Tom Smith
On the one hand, universities have returned to a quasi-Victorian concern with the unique fragility and vulnerability of college women in matters of sex. [read post]
10 Dec 2021, 9:30 pm by ernst
update: "Skull Bumps and the 'Criminal,'" in which Catherine L. [read post]
12 Aug 2020, 7:31 am
It is in this vein that Catherine Nickerson asserts in “Murder as Social Criticism,” that crime fiction “is deeply enmeshed with most of the thornier problems of the Victorian, modern, and postmodern eras, including gender roles and privileges, racial prejudice and the formation of racial consciousness, the significance and morality of wealth and capital, and the conflicting demands of privacy and social control” (American Literary History). [read post]
12 Aug 2020, 7:28 am by Christine Corcos
It is in this vein that Catherine Nickerson asserts in “Murder as Social Criticism,” that crime fiction “is deeply enmeshed with most of the thornier problems of the Victorian, modern, and postmodern eras, including gender roles and privileges, racial prejudice and the formation of racial consciousness, the significance and morality of wealth and capital, and the conflicting demands of privacy and social control” (American Literary History). [read post]
6 Oct 2010, 12:04 am
On this day in ...... 1921, International PEN was founded in London by Catherine Amy Dawson Scott (right), a writer of poems and novels who hailed from Cornwall in England, whom many sources call "Mrs. [read post]
23 Mar 2016, 4:00 am by Guest Blogger
Catherine Porter at the Toronto Star has called for a stronger strangulation law. [read post]
31 Dec 2023, 5:25 am by David Pocklington
The Chancellor did not consider that the petitioners had made out a sufficiently convincing justification for not reusing the Victorian tiles. [read post]