If you’re confused by a turn of phrase in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby” or a startling metaphor in Kafka’s “Metamorphosis,” just ask the book to explain itself, and it will.
T. J. Clark Thames & Hudson, London, 2025 Just a little over fifty years ago, I wanted to read the most challenging new art ...
In this video we look at Italy's longest running factory occupation, of the GKN automotive plant in Florence / Firenze Italy, which is now in its third year. The workers have occupied the ...
Toobin couches his exploration of Gerald Ford’s pardon of Richard Nixon within both the broader context of mounting presidential hegemony ...
Senior lawyers in Continental Europe are navigating a turbulent political landscape, with some bracing for the impact of U.S.
President Donald Trump is locked in a legal battle to end the automatic right to citizenship for children who are born in the country even if their parents arrived illegally. Roughly a third of ...
Whether or not we believe that this literature has a place in the curriculum and however we believe the classics should be ...
In his insightful book about America's housing crisis, Yoni Appelbaum argues that more than a century of restrictive ...
In “The Revolutionary Self,” the historian Lynn Hunt explores the way 18th-century culture transformed our sense of power in ...
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KIDY-TV San Angelo on MSNAngelo State political science professor publishes new bookDr. Anthony “Tony” Bartl has published his second book, "Constitutionalism and Liberty: Essays in Honor of David K. Nichols".
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Hosted on MSNWhat’s Trump’s Game? Trying to Save a Weakened US EmpireDonald Trump has hit the ground running, asserting himself and his will to power to the maximum, starting before his second ...
Marc Dunkelman is a fellow in international and public affairs at Brown University’s Watson Institute, and one of the ...
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