218,011 research outputs found
Review of "Literature and Political Intellection in Early Stuart England" by Brett A. Hudson.
Todd Butler. Literature and Political Intellection in Early Stuart England. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019. xiii + 240 pp. $77.00. Review by Brett A. Hudson, Middle Tennessee State University
Recommended from our members
The 2011 Season of the La Milpa Core Project
Table of Contents : Preface / by Brett A. Houk and Gregory Zaro (iii) -- The 2011 La Milpa Core Project Season Summary / by Brett A. Houk and Gregory Zaro (p.1-14) -- The 2011 Excavations at Structure 28 / by Vincent Sisneros, Walter Beckwith, and Brett A. Houk (p.15-38) -- The 2011 Excavations at Courtyard-100 / by Lindsey R. Moats, Walter Beckwith, and Gregory Zaro (p.39-78) -- Report on Ceramic Analysis for La Milpa Terminal Classic Project / by Lauren A. Sullivan (p.77-106) -- Report on Stone Tools From Courtyard 100 / by David M. Hyde (p.107-116) -- The La Milpa Core Project: 2007-201 1 Project Lists / by Brett A. Houk (p.117)Texas Archeological Research Laborator
A Conversation with Justice Brett Kavanaugh at Catholic Law
On Thursday, September 26th, the Center for the Constitution and the Catholic Intellectual Tradition (CIT) hosted a conversation with Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh of the United States Supreme Court. The event, moderated by CIT Director J. Joel Alicea, and attended by faculty, students, and alumni of Catholic Law, marks the beginning of another ambitious year of CIT programming, and its first year as a permanent Center at Catholic Law.
The conversation between Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh and Prof. Joel Alicea covered everything from the jurisprudence of recent Court decisions like Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and United States v. Rahimi, to the relationship between originalism and tradition, the recent strides made by Court decisions upholding religious liberty, and what the Catholic intellectual tradition can contribute to legal education, among others
Boys of England and Edwin J. Brett, 1866-99
Boys of England was a Victorian boys' periodical. It was published weekly by Edwin J. Brett from 1866 to 1899, initially from the Fleet Street offices of the Newsagents'
Publishing Company, and later from Brett's own `Boys of England Office'. It was the first periodical of its kind, and achieved a large sale amongst eager youngsters.
The purpose of this thesis is to provide a general history of BOE and Brett, neither of which has yet been attempted. More specifically, the thesis is intended to address
misconceptions regarding Brett and his work. Historians of boys' periodical literature have tended to portray Brett's papers as largely supportive of middle class hegemony. They
argue that they failed to connect with the lives of their upper working and lower middle class readers. However, this thesis contends that in actual fact BOE engaged closely with
the lives of its readership, comprised mainly of boys from the `respectable' working classes. Therefore, BOE should rightly be considered an important, indigenous component
of working class society and culture in mid to late Victorian Britain.
To provide as comprehensive an analysis as possible, the thesis is divided into three sections: `Paper and Proprietor'; `Content'; `Response'. These sections are divided into further chapters, each exploring a salient facet of BOE and Brett. Some of these engage with, and challenge, the existing historiography of boys' periodical literature. Others introduce historiographies previously remote from the study of boys' papers, widening the
remit of this relatively self-contained field. Some examine entirely unstudied, or largely understudied, subject matter.
Ultimately, this thesis is intended to make a valuable contribution not only to the historiography of boys' papers specifically, and children's literature in general, but also to the wider historiographies of Victorian social and cultural history and the Victorian working class
A Conversation with Justice Brett Kavanaugh
On Thursday, September 26th, 2024, the Center for the Constitution and the Catholic Intellectual Tradition at The Catholic University of America hosted a conversation between Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh and Professor J. Joel Alicea. This was the inaugural event of the new Center. The conversation covered topics such as constitutional interpretation, the separation of powers, religious liberty, and the Catholic intellectual tradition. This is a transcript of the conversation, and the text appears substantially as it was delivered. The video of the event may be found at this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sKvSwzkmqo
M. Brett, The English Church under Henry I
Genet Jean-Philippe. M. Brett, The English Church under Henry I. In: Annales. Economies, sociétés, civilisations. 33ᵉ année, N. 1, 1978. pp. 159-161
- …
