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Archive for June, 2010|Monthly archive page

Jefferson’s Laws of Nature

In Arts & Letters, Jurisprudence, Law-and-Literature, Literary Theory & Criticism, Politics, Thomas Jefferson on June 29, 2010 at 10:24 pm

My article on Jefferson is going to print this month.  Titled “‘Jefferson’s Laws of Nature’: Newtonian Influence and the Dual Valence of Jurisprudence and Science,” the article will appear in The Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence, Vol. 23, No. 2 (2010).  View the SSRN page here.

Shakespeare and Forster

In Arts & Letters, E.M. Forster, Law-and-Literature, Legal Education & Pedagogy, Literary Theory & Criticism, Shakespeare on June 17, 2010 at 3:35 pm

On SSRN, I’ve posted abstracts for articles on E.M. Forster and William Shakespeare.  The Forster abstract is available here. The Shakespeare abstract is available here.

The Dred Scott Decision

In Arts & Letters, Dred Scott, Jurisprudence, Law-and-Literature, Legal Education & Pedagogy, Literary Theory & Criticism, The Supreme Court on June 16, 2010 at 10:08 pm

My paper on the Dred Scott decision is available on SSRN.  Click here to view the abstract and then click “One-click Download” to read the paper.

A Quick Musing on the Santayana Movement

In Arts & Letters, Literary Theory & Criticism, Santayana on June 8, 2010 at 3:54 pm

There’s been, of late, a renewal of interest in George Santayana.

Yale University Press recently released The Genteel Tradition in American Philosophy and Character and Opinion in the United States (2009), edited by James Seaton.  With contributions by Seaton, Wilfred M. McClay, John Lachs, and Roger Kimball, and comprised of two seminal works by Santayana and four critical essays about Santayana, the book, however thin, seeks nothing less than a revamping of “culture.”  That’s because its subject, the enigmatic Santayana, was an aesthete par excellence and, paradoxically if not impossibly, an atheist-Catholic defender of the faith.

Most conservatives remember Santayana from Russell Kirk’s magnum opus, The Conservative Mind.  The original title to that work was The Conservative Mind: From Burke to Santayana.  Santayana’s reputation has receded in importance since Kirk’s landmark book, in part because conservatives have drifted away from the literati while the literati have drifted away from conservatives.      Read the rest of this entry »