A Review of Writing and Righting: Literature in the Age of Human Rights by Lyndsey Stonebridge. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021. Pp. 176. $25 hardcover
Martha Nussbaum’s argument that literature cultivates 'powers of imagination that are essential to c...
This essay recognizes human rights as somethingmore profound than legal rights. In the context of th...
The “Human Rights Novel” is a popular genre with great possibilities for exposing readers to issues ...
PhDIn this thesis I argue that there are qualities of literary writing which can illuminate human ri...
This essay intervenes in current debates over human rights-oriented approaches to literature through...
Ramona Wadi reviews Seyla Benhabib’s important new treatise on human rights discourse
This is perhaps not the chapter you were expecting to find in this book, for how can an art have a p...
There is now a sizable body of scholarship on the relationship between human rights and literature. ...
Hannah Arendt\u27s name and ideas are pervasive in Human Rights critical theory. In fact, Arendt is ...
Humanities scholars have recently begun to use the phrase ‘narrating rights’ as a way of describing ...
Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College
All good writing takes us somewhere uncomfortable. One of the great services given by Textual Practi...
In the second half of the twentieth-century, the promise of universal human rights emerged as arguab...
Here comes, at long last, a book on human rights that clears the way for going forward outside the s...
It would be a mistake to assume that the concept of human rights as an ethical precept is an inventi...
Martha Nussbaum’s argument that literature cultivates 'powers of imagination that are essential to c...
This essay recognizes human rights as somethingmore profound than legal rights. In the context of th...
The “Human Rights Novel” is a popular genre with great possibilities for exposing readers to issues ...
PhDIn this thesis I argue that there are qualities of literary writing which can illuminate human ri...
This essay intervenes in current debates over human rights-oriented approaches to literature through...
Ramona Wadi reviews Seyla Benhabib’s important new treatise on human rights discourse
This is perhaps not the chapter you were expecting to find in this book, for how can an art have a p...
There is now a sizable body of scholarship on the relationship between human rights and literature. ...
Hannah Arendt\u27s name and ideas are pervasive in Human Rights critical theory. In fact, Arendt is ...
Humanities scholars have recently begun to use the phrase ‘narrating rights’ as a way of describing ...
Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College
All good writing takes us somewhere uncomfortable. One of the great services given by Textual Practi...
In the second half of the twentieth-century, the promise of universal human rights emerged as arguab...
Here comes, at long last, a book on human rights that clears the way for going forward outside the s...
It would be a mistake to assume that the concept of human rights as an ethical precept is an inventi...
Martha Nussbaum’s argument that literature cultivates 'powers of imagination that are essential to c...
This essay recognizes human rights as somethingmore profound than legal rights. In the context of th...
The “Human Rights Novel” is a popular genre with great possibilities for exposing readers to issues ...