An Earnest Revolutionary
Terry Eagleton's newest book tries to combine serious literary criticism with a refined form of Marxism—the result is an unstable compound.
Terry Eagleton's newest book tries to combine serious literary criticism with a refined form of Marxism—the result is an unstable compound.
Justice Clarence Thomas has had many important influences, but he will always be his grandfather's son.
In allying with National Conservatism, has Claremont lost sight of its founding principles?
The common good legal movement avoids the hard work of making constitutionalism function in the polity we actually inhabit.
The legacy of Angela Merkel's 16-year reign as Chancellor of Germany is more complicated than Kati Marton's hagiography suggests.
Eric R. Claeys shows the limitations of John Roberts's minimalist approach.
By overturning Griggs v. Duke Power Company SCOTUS could reduce the cost of a university education.
This is a novel about things boys used to do, like surviving in the wilderness, fighting for a good cause, meeting girls, and becoming men.
As the principal poet of Western Christendom, Shakespeare soars above his parochial modern critics.