THE NEW RAMBLER REVIEW

  • AN ONLINE REVIEW OF BOOKS
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A Broad View of Character for Nineteenth-Century Law and Literature

By ADAM KOZACZKA

Review of Character: Writing and Reputation in Victorian Law and Literature, by Catherine O. Frank.

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • LITERARY STUDIES

Making Liberalism New, or Neutering Liberalism?

By ALEX ZUTT

Review of Making Liberalism New: American Intellectuals, Modern Literature, and the Rewriting of a Political Tradition, by Ian Afflerbach

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • LITERARY STUDIES

The Politics of Crime Stories

By GREGORY BRAZEAL

Review of Unwilling Executioner: Crime Fiction and the State, by Andrew Pepper

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • LITERARY STUDIES

Who Invented Modern Political Satire?

By ANDREW BENJAMIN BRICKER

Review of The Birth of Modern Political Satire: Romeyn de Hooghe and the Glorious Revolution, by Meredith McNeill Hale

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • LITERARY STUDIES

The Real Power of Fictional Grievance

By SAL NICOLAZZO

Review of Defending Privilege: Rights, Status, and Legal Peril in the British Novel, by Nicole Mansfield Wright

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • LITERARY STUDIES

More Articles ...

  • Milton's Jurisprudential Play
  • The Power of “Presidents”
  • The Elephant in the Text: On “Content Formalism”
  • How Do We Begin Again?

 

 

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