THE NEW RAMBLER REVIEW

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  • The Law in its Difference

The Law in its Difference: Institutional Competencies, Coercive Mechanisms, and Obscenity Law

By ROBERT SPOO

Review of Reading the Obscene: Transgressive Editors and the Class Politics of US Literature, by Jordan S. Carroll, and A Matter of Obscenity: The Politics of Censorship in Modern England, by Christopher Hilliard

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • HISTORY

Politics, Law, and “Founding Moments” in Late Colonial India

By SARATH PILLAI

Review of Norms and Politics: Sir Benegal Narsing Rau in the Making of the Indian Constitution, 1935-50, by Arvind Elangovan 

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • HISTORY

Haphazard Colonial Dispossession

By JONAS BENS

Review of Empire and the Making of Native Title: Sovereignty, Property and Indigenous People, by Bain Attwood

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • HISTORY

Liberal Protestants and American Politics

By GALE KENNY

Review of Before the Religious Right: Liberal Protestants, Human Rights, and the Polarization of the United States, by Gene Zubovich 

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • HISTORY

From Compromise to New Birth: Lincoln’s Constitution, and Ours

By GEOFFREY R. KIRSCH

Review of The Crooked Path to Abolition: Abraham Lincoln and the Antislavery Constitution, by James Oakes, and The Broken Constitution: Abraham Lincoln, Slavery, and the Refounding of America, by Noah Feldman

  • Connor Maxwell Ewing
  • REVIEWS
  • HISTORY

More Articles ...

  • Skull Bumps and the "Criminal"
  • Burn it Down
  • How the Office Came Home
  • The Transformative Power of War

 

 

 

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