Book Review

Paul Raffield, Shakespeare’s Strangers and English Law, A Book Review by Andy Lowry @hartpublishing @PaulDR1957

Paul Raffield, Shakespeare’s Strangers and English Law (Hart Pub. 2023) A Review by Andy Lowry The third of Paul Raffield’s[1] monographs on Shakespeare and English law “attempt[s] to provide a wide-ranging examination and analysis...

Barbara Hughes-Moore, Nicole Mansfield Wright’s Defending Privilege: Rights, Status, and Legal Peril in the British Novel (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2020) (Book Review) @Barbara_Elin @JHUPress

Book Review: Nicole Mansfield Wright, Defending Privilege Barbara Hughes-Moore   In Defending Privilege: Rights, Status, and Legal Peril in the British Novel, Nicole Mansfield Wright impressively critiques the ways in which conservative writers have...

Shubha Ghosh, Law’s Pop, Justice’s Fizzle: Review of Law and Justice in Japanese Popular Culture (Ashley Pearson, Thomas Giddens, and Kieran Tranter, eds., Routledge, 2018)

Law’s Pop, Justice’s Fizzle Review of Law and Justice in Japanese Popular Culture (Ashley Pearson, et al., Routledge 2018)   Law & Culture, as a discipline, offers a challenge to legal theory. With all...

Leslie Griffin Reviews Stuart Eizenstat, President Carter: The White House Years (Thomas Dunne Books, 2018)

Stuart Eizenstat on President Carter’s Morality: Episodes From an Administration  Leslie C. Griffin* Stuart Eizenstat’s 999-page book, President Carter: The White House Years, promises to “redeem his presidency from the lingering memories.”[1] The book...