Meet five alumni who have followed their muse to author books on wide0ranging subjects - from poetry to military history, from the deeply personal to the highly political
The article discusses how the study of literature can contribute to a law student's legal education ...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
Gulag: A History, the recipient of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for general non-fiction, may be particula...
Meet five alumni who have followed their muse to author books on wide0ranging subjects - from poetry...
Answering the writer\u27s muse – Want to teach law? – Embrace change, Bob Woodruff, \u2787, tells U-...
The rites of writing. The practice of law demands an e.,acting, fact-rich kind of writing, but some ...
Law School faculty members produce books with an astonishing intellectual and historical sweep. Thei...
The author here examines the ways in which law and literature complement each other; legal settings ...
Most writers of legal literature are human. Most humans are male or female. Some males and females m...
There is a dichotomy in the problem of sufficient interest in and of realization of the sheer import...
"Gulag: A History", the recipient of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for general non-fiction, may be particu...
The great writers have one thing in common-they castigate the human race, including themselves, the ...
The relationship between the law and the power of the written word is one that is as undeniable as i...
• This Law Grad’s Collection of Folktales of Justice Wins National Aesop Prize for 1995 • Professor ...
This Issue: What\u27s in an Old Lawyer\u27s Attic? by John Barden Pro Se / praw siy, pro say / A no...
The article discusses how the study of literature can contribute to a law student's legal education ...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
Gulag: A History, the recipient of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for general non-fiction, may be particula...
Meet five alumni who have followed their muse to author books on wide0ranging subjects - from poetry...
Answering the writer\u27s muse – Want to teach law? – Embrace change, Bob Woodruff, \u2787, tells U-...
The rites of writing. The practice of law demands an e.,acting, fact-rich kind of writing, but some ...
Law School faculty members produce books with an astonishing intellectual and historical sweep. Thei...
The author here examines the ways in which law and literature complement each other; legal settings ...
Most writers of legal literature are human. Most humans are male or female. Some males and females m...
There is a dichotomy in the problem of sufficient interest in and of realization of the sheer import...
"Gulag: A History", the recipient of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for general non-fiction, may be particu...
The great writers have one thing in common-they castigate the human race, including themselves, the ...
The relationship between the law and the power of the written word is one that is as undeniable as i...
• This Law Grad’s Collection of Folktales of Justice Wins National Aesop Prize for 1995 • Professor ...
This Issue: What\u27s in an Old Lawyer\u27s Attic? by John Barden Pro Se / praw siy, pro say / A no...
The article discusses how the study of literature can contribute to a law student's legal education ...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
Gulag: A History, the recipient of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for general non-fiction, may be particula...