Over at CLR Forum , Notre Dame’s Kristine Kalanges is having a discussion with me and my colleague Marc DeGirolami about Radical Orthodoxy, an intellectual movement that originated in 1990s Britain, and its implications for political theory. Kristine argues that Radical Orthodoxy can provide . . . . Continue Reading »
In America this week, the big legal news was the Supreme Courts oral argument in Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin , a case concerning the constitutionality of race-based affirmative action in higher education. This will be the second time in a decade that the Court has addressed . . . . Continue Reading »
At a lawyers conference I attended recently, the conversation turned to The Innocence of Muslims, the offensive YouTube video that has sparked riots throughout the Muslim world. Why do they react this way? a partner at a major law firm asked, referring to Muslim . . . . Continue Reading »
Armenian Golgotha: A Memoir of the Armenian Genocide, 1915“1918 by Grigoris Balakian translated by Peter Balakian and Aris Sevag Knopf, 509 pages, $35 On April 24, 1915, police arrested 250 leaders of the Armenian community in Istanbul and deported them to the Turkish interior. Among them was . . . . Continue Reading »
Dangerous Nation by Robert Kagan Knopf, 527 pages, $30 These Yankees are most disagreeable Fellows to have to do with about any American question, an exasperated Lord Palmerston complained in the middle of the nineteenth century. They are on the Spot, strong, deeply interested in . . . . Continue Reading »
Earlier this month, as it has for many centuries, the Armenian Church commemorated the Feast of St. Vartan and His Companions. Although the feast is virtually unknown to other Christians, it serves as a reminder of the long and often bloody history of their co-religionists in the Middle East.If . . . . Continue Reading »
Snow by Orhan Pamuk Knopf. 426 pp. $26. Two months after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Turkish author Orhan Pamuk published an essay in the New York Review of Books (titled “The Anger of the Damned”) in which Pamuk, who is often mentioned as a contender for the Nobel Prize, tried . . . . Continue Reading »
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