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Fifteen Eighty Four

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Why is this polarized Supreme Court showing moderation?

The Republicans’ rush to appoint Judge Amy Coney Barrett before the presidential election is yet another example of polarized politicians and citizens fighting over an increasingly polarized Supreme...

Christopher D. Johnston, Brandon L. Bartels | 14 Oct 2020

To solve problems we must connect systems

It’s been hard to make sense of COVID-19. At least, I have found it hard. So many deaths. So many changes to everyday life. So much political strangeness. So much uncertainty about the future. This...

Corinna Hawkes | 13 Oct 2020

Interactional rituals and the systematic analysis of avoiding conflict – Part 6

Permit as a speech act addresses a future action to be undertaken by the addressee in his own interests, which almost always appears to concur with a Request for a Permit. In the context of social distancing,...

Dániel Z. Kádár, Juliane House | 9 Oct 2020

Interactional rituals and the systematic analysis of avoiding conflict – Part 5

In the following, we discuss the speech act type ‘Invite’. This speech act expresses that the speaker wishes her addressee to know that she is in favour of a future action to be performed by the other,...

Dániel Z. Kádár, Juliane House | 9 Oct 2020

Interactional rituals and the systematic analysis of avoiding conflict – Part 4

In this blog we discuss the speech act ‘suggest’. This speech act involves the situation where a speaker is communicating that he/she is as much in favour of the addressee performing a future action...

Dániel Z. Kádár, Juliane House | 9 Oct 2020

Interactional rituals and the systematic analysis of avoiding conflict – Part 3

Of the various speech acts used in the wake of COVID-19 and the corresponding need for social distancing, ‘Apologise’ is perhaps the most important. Since the enforcement of social distancing unavoidably...

Dániel Z. Kádár, Juliane House | 9 Oct 2020

Untangling the Transnational Law and Politics of Criminal Justice

Criminal law has long served as a powerful symbol of the state’s monopoly over the use of violence. However, as the world becomes more economically, technologically, and socially interconnected,...

Gregory Shaffer, Ely Aaronson | 5 Oct 2020

Bridging the Horizons: Paul and the White Privileged Church

The discussion of privilege, especially, “white privilege” is a hot button subject that gets routinely discussed in news commentary, social media, in sociology classes, or anywhere where race is a...

Nijay K. Gupta, Michael F. Bird | 5 Oct 2020

Editing Thomas Hardy’s ‘Under the Greenwood Tree’

The first thing to say for any reader who is not familiar with scholarly editions like this of Hardy’s fiction, is that it is different from all others and really significant. It gives, if you combine...

Simon Gatrell | 1 Oct 2020

Editing Hardy’s ‘The Return of the Native’

My daughter is taking an undergraduate course in Shakespearean theatre this semester, and one of her foundation readings is Elinor Fuchs’s influential short essay, ‘E.F.’s Visit to a Small...

Tim Dolin | 1 Oct 2020

Editing Thomas Hardy’s ‘The Woodlanders’

My love affair with The Woodlanders began many years ago when I covered much of the groundwork for a scholarly edition while doing my MA —entitled “Materials for an edition of Thomas Hardy’s The...

Alan Manford | 1 Oct 2020

Editing Thomas Hardy’s ‘Desperate Remedies’

In some ways producing a scholarly edition of Desperate Remedies is easier than editing other Hardy novels, first of all because there is no extant manuscript. The story is that after he completed...

Richard Nemesvari | 1 Oct 2020