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The Popular Culture Studies Journal
THE POPULAR CULTURE STUDIES JOURNAL VOLUME 6 NUMBER 1 2018 Editor NORMA JONES Liquid Flicks Media, Inc./IXMachine Managing Editor JULIA LARGENT McPherson College Assistant Editor GARRET L. CASTLEBERRY Mid-America Christian University Copy Editor Kevin Calcamp Queens University of Charlotte Reviews Editor MALYNNDA JOHNSON Indiana State University Assistant Reviews Editor JESSICA BENHAM University of Pittsburgh Please visit the PCSJ at: http://mpcaaca.org/the-popular-culture- studies-journal/ The Popular Culture Studies Journal is the official journal of the Midwest Popular and American Culture Association. Copyright © 2018 Midwest Popular and American Culture Association. All rights reserved. MPCA/ACA, 421 W. Huron St Unit 1304, Chicago, IL 60654 Cover credit: Cover Artwork: “Wrestling” by Brent Jones © 2018 Courtesy of https://openclipart.org EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD ANTHONY ADAH FALON DEIMLER Minnesota State University, Moorhead University of Wisconsin-Madison JESSICA AUSTIN HANNAH DODD Anglia Ruskin University The Ohio State University AARON BARLOW ASHLEY M. DONNELLY New York City College of Technology (CUNY) Ball State University Faculty Editor, Academe, the magazine of the AAUP JOSEF BENSON LEIGH H. EDWARDS University of Wisconsin Parkside Florida State University PAUL BOOTH VICTOR EVANS DePaul University Seattle University GARY BURNS JUSTIN GARCIA Northern Illinois University Millersville University KELLI S. BURNS ALEXANDRA GARNER University of South Florida Bowling Green State University ANNE M. CANAVAN MATTHEW HALE Salt Lake Community College Indiana University, Bloomington ERIN MAE CLARK NICOLE HAMMOND Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota University of California, Santa Cruz BRIAN COGAN ART HERBIG Molloy College Indiana University - Purdue University, Fort Wayne JARED JOHNSON ANDREW F. HERRMANN Thiel College East Tennessee State University JESSE KAVADLO MATTHEW NICOSIA Maryville University of St. -
Speakers of the House of Commons
Parliamentary Information List BRIEFING PAPER 04637a 21 August 2015 Speakers of the House of Commons Speaker Date Constituency Notes Peter de Montfort 1258 − William Trussell 1327 − Appeared as joint spokesman of Lords and Commons. Styled 'Procurator' Henry Beaumont 1332 (Mar) − Appeared as joint spokesman of Lords and Commons. Sir Geoffrey Le Scrope 1332 (Sep) − Appeared as joint spokesman of Lords and Commons. Probably Chief Justice. William Trussell 1340 − William Trussell 1343 − Appeared for the Commons alone. William de Thorpe 1347-1348 − Probably Chief Justice. Baron of the Exchequer, 1352. William de Shareshull 1351-1352 − Probably Chief Justice. Sir Henry Green 1361-1363¹ − Doubtful if he acted as Speaker. All of the above were Presiding Officers rather than Speakers Sir Peter de la Mare 1376 − Sir Thomas Hungerford 1377 (Jan-Mar) Wiltshire The first to be designated Speaker. Sir Peter de la Mare 1377 (Oct-Nov) Herefordshire Sir James Pickering 1378 (Oct-Nov) Westmorland Sir John Guildesborough 1380 Essex Sir Richard Waldegrave 1381-1382 Suffolk Sir James Pickering 1383-1390 Yorkshire During these years the records are defective and this Speaker's service might not have been unbroken. Sir John Bussy 1394-1398 Lincolnshire Beheaded 1399 Sir John Cheyne 1399 (Oct) Gloucestershire Resigned after only two days in office. John Dorewood 1399 (Oct-Nov) Essex Possibly the first lawyer to become Speaker. Sir Arnold Savage 1401(Jan-Mar) Kent Sir Henry Redford 1402 (Oct-Nov) Lincolnshire Sir Arnold Savage 1404 (Jan-Apr) Kent Sir William Sturmy 1404 (Oct-Nov) Devonshire Or Esturmy Sir John Tiptoft 1406 Huntingdonshire Created Baron Tiptoft, 1426. -
Charter Constitutionalism: the Myth of Edward Coke and the Virginia Charter*
Boston College Law School Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School Boston College Law School Faculty Papers 7-2016 Charter Constitutionalism: The yM th of Edward Coke and the Virginia Charter Mary Sarah Bilder Boston College Law School, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://lawdigitalcommons.bc.edu/lsfp Part of the Constitutional Law Commons, Legal History Commons, and the State and Local Government Law Commons Recommended Citation Mary Sarah Bilder. "Charter Constitutionalism: The yM th of Edward Coke and the Virginia Charter." North Carolina Law Review 94, no.5 (2016): 1545-1598. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Boston College Law School Faculty Papers by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 94 N.C. L. REV. 1545 (2016) CHARTER CONSTITUTIONALISM: THE MYTH OF EDWARD COKE AND THE VIRGINIA CHARTER* MARY SARAH BILDER** [A]ll and every the persons being our subjects . and every of their children, which shall happen to be born within . the said several colonies . shall have and enjoy all liberties, franchises and immunities . as if they had been abiding and born, within this our realm of England . .—Virginia Charter (1606)1 Magna Carta’s connection to the American constitutional tradition has been traced to Edward Coke’s insertion of English liberties in the 1606 Virginia Charter. This account curiously turns out to be unsupported by direct evidence. This Article recounts an alternative history of the origins of English liberties in American constitutionalism. -
(2015) Warden Harmar and the Ralegh Trial1 on 3 November 1603
Warden Harmar and the Ralegh Trial1 On 3 November 1603, the warden of Winchester College received a letter signed by James I requiring the warden, fellows and scholars of Winchester College to remove themselves to other accommodation in order that his majesty’s judges and serjeants could be housed ‘for the time of their attending his special service this term in this place’. The ‘special service’ was the trial of Sir Walter Ralegh, which was held in the Great Hall of Winchester Castle on Thursday, 17 November. The ten judges whom the King required to be housed in the college were: Thomas Howard, Earl of Suffolk; the Lord Chamberlain, Charles Blount, Earl of Devonshire; Henry Howard, who was created Earl of Northampton the following year; Robert Lord Cecil; Edward Lord Wotton, of Morley; Sir John Stanhope, vice-chamberlain of the Household and a privy councillor; the Lord Chief Justice and Speaker of the House of Commons, Sir John Popham, who also presided over the trials of the Earl of Essex (despite being a material witness for the prosecution), and the Gunpowder conspirators; Mr Justice Gawdy, who as Sir Francis Gawdy became Chief Justice of Common Pleas in 1605; and Sir Peter Warburton, a judge of the Court of Common Pleas. There was also the Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, Sir Edmund Anderson, who had taken, says the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB), ‘a prominent role in the leading political trials of the second half of Elizabeth’s reign, beginning with that of Dr William Parry in 1584 and that of Anthony Babington and his supporters in September 1586. -
The Myth of Edward Coke and the Virginia Charter*
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School Boston College Law School Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School Boston College Law School Faculty Papers 7-2016 Charter Constitutionalism: The yM th of Edward Coke and the Virginia Charter Mary S. Bilder Boston College Law School, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://lawdigitalcommons.bc.edu/lsfp Part of the Constitutional Law Commons, Legal History Commons, and the State and Local Government Law Commons Recommended Citation Mary S. Bilder. "Charter Constitutionalism: The yM th of Edward Coke and the Virginia Charter." North Carolina Law Review 94, no.5 (2016): 1545-1598. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Boston College Law School Faculty Papers by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 94 N.C. L. REV. 1545 (2016) CHARTER CONSTITUTIONALISM: THE MYTH OF EDWARD COKE AND THE VIRGINIA CHARTER* MARY SARAH BILDER** [A]ll and every the persons being our subjects . and every of their children, which shall happen to be born within . the said several colonies . shall have and enjoy all liberties, franchises and immunities . as if they had been abiding and born, within this our realm of England . .—Virginia Charter (1606)1 Magna Carta’s connection to the American constitutional tradition has been traced to Edward Coke’s insertion of English liberties in the 1606 Virginia Charter. -
Political Elites and Community Relations in Elizabethan Devon, 1588-1603
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Plymouth Electronic Archive and Research Library Networks, News and Communication: Political Elites and Community Relations in Elizabethan Devon, 1588-1603 by Ian David Cooper A thesis submitted to Plymouth University in partial fulfilment for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Humanities and Performing Arts Faculty of Arts In collaboration with Devon Record Office September 2012 In loving memory of my grandfathers, Eric George Wright and Ronald Henry George Cooper, and my godfather, David Michael Jefferies ii Copyright Statement This copy of the thesis has been supplied on condition that anyone who consults it is understood to recognise that its copyright rests with its author and that no quotation from the thesis and no information derived from it may be published without the author’s prior consent. iii Abstract Ian David Cooper ‘Networks, News and Communication: Political Elites and Community Relations in Elizabethan Devon, 1588-1603’ Focusing on the ‘second reign’ of Queen Elizabeth I (1588-1603), this thesis constitutes the first significant socio-political examination of Elizabethan Devon – a geographically peripheral county, yet strategically central in matters pertaining to national defence and security. A complex web of personal associations and informal alliances underpinned politics and governance in Tudor England; but whereas a great deal is now understood about relations between both the political elite and the organs of government at the centre of affairs, many questions still remain unanswered about how networks of political actors functioned at a provincial and neighbourhood level, and how these networks kept in touch with one another, central government and the court. -
EDWARDS Family.Pdf
,_~(J ~ '\h~ NJ.""~\ L\,,~ \ vJ.J~ ~i.A~~t 't ?"d_,_J £°"-'\<~ I )\,J\ la<-.J.,c~ 1\).,,,..,1, .... : Xe 5 4-44 E 2G e...2-G. cc~ - -+~6 QCr.~c ~g:cccn:Mt"S:: '°' , The Edwardes Legacy by David D. Edwards ~GATEWAY PRESS, INC. L...::~=-"'-~.=;..._; BALTIMORE 1992 -~o- 1 1 THE MIRROR, TueJday, September 28, 1999 PAGE 15 PIRATE'S HEIRS TO ATAKEMERICA may turn into MANHATTANa when he wa.s about to be sac.ki?d for By ANNE1TE W11HERJDGE modern-day treastre island for cruising Broadway 1n drag. of Edwards Heirs - with 3.200 Trinity Church lawyers · argue more than 5,000 descendants members in America and 2.000 in they know nothing of Edwards. of a 17th century Welsh pirate. Wales - are set to grab 78 prime But after years of delay, a feder They have been given the go acres worth S680billion. al court in Pittsburgh, Pemisylva. aheact. to claim a ch unk of Man The Edwards clan say Queen nia. says there is a claim because hatta.ri worth billions of pounds. Anne gave him 100 acres for raid records show that the pirate owned The relatives of swashbuckling ing treasure-laden Spanish galleons. land in New York in the 1690s. Robert Edwards have battled New Edwards leased lower Manhattan Family spokeswoman Cleoma York's Trinity Church through the to Trinity and the heirs say the Foore said: "This will be our best courts for years. church wardens had to hand it back bite at the Big Apple." ;_ A judge ha.s ruled that the group after 99 years. -
Hamlet (The New Cambridge Shakespeare, Philip Edwards Ed., 2E, 2003)
Hamlet Prince of Denmark Edited by Philip Edwards An international team of scholars offers: . modernized, easily accessible texts • ample commentary and introductions . attention to the theatrical qualities of each play and its stage history . informative illustrations Hamlet Philip Edwards aims to bring the reader, playgoer and director of Hamlet into the closest possible contact with Shakespeare's most famous and most perplexing play. He concentrates on essentials, dealing succinctly with the huge volume of commentary and controversy which the play has provoked and offering a way forward which enables us once again to recognise its full tragic energy. The introduction and commentary reveal an author with a lively awareness of the importance of perceiving the play as a theatrical document, one which comes to life, which is completed only in performance.' Review of English Studies For this updated edition, Robert Hapgood Cover design by Paul Oldman, based has added a new section on prevailing on a draining by David Hockney, critical and performance approaches to reproduced by permission of tlie Hamlet. He discusses recent film and stage performances, actors of the Hamlet role as well as directors of the play; his account of new scholarship stresses the role of remembering and forgetting in the play, and the impact of feminist and performance studies. CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS www.cambridge.org THE NEW CAMBRIDGE SHAKESPEARE GENERAL EDITOR Brian Gibbons, University of Munster ASSOCIATE GENERAL EDITOR A. R. Braunmuller, University of California, Los Angeles From the publication of the first volumes in 1984 the General Editor of the New Cambridge Shakespeare was Philip Brockbank and the Associate General Editors were Brian Gibbons and Robin Hood. -
New Documents Relating to the Popham Expedition, 1607 by Charles Edward Banks
1929.] Popham Expedition Documents 307 NEW DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE POPHAM EXPEDITION, 1607 BY CHARLES EDWARD BANKS T HOPE that none of the members in present at- •*• tendance at this meeting has been lured from his comfortable den by the announcement of the title of my contribution for today as an offering to revive the highly controversial topic of the character, purpose and continuity of the Popham Colony which settled on the Maine coast in 1607. Members whose memory runs back three score years can recall the almost riotous interchange of verbal encounters which sig- nalized the dedication of a tablet by the Maine Historical Society in memory of the first formal settle- ment undertaken by Englishmen on a bleak and for- bidding promontory at the mouth of the Kennebec River. While this ceremony was laudable in its design it was less of a dedication to a particular event than a bold challenge to the Pilgrim Moloch to defend its well settled claims to primacy as the beginning of English civilization on the New England coast. It brought forth a volcanic eruption of hostile criticism (naturally from Massachusetts), and a shower of pamphlets from protagonists and antagonists. Much of this exciting incident in historical circles is now forgotten but while it lasted the services of the police were frequently sug- gested and might well have been utilized. Among the champions of the "Rock" at Plymouth, then regarded as sacrosanct, was a former official of this Society who threw the "plumed knights" of Maine into spasms of rage by characterizing this colony as made up of con- victs of the lowest order and ticket of leave men! At this period in the development of historical study con- cerning early colonization it is to be understood that 308 American Antiquarian Society [Oct., very little research had been made by either Popham- ites or Pilgrims beyond printed sources. -
Comic Corner: Impressive, and Coltrane Once Again Absolutely Kills It with His Tenor Solos
THE DOUGLAS COLLEGE NEWSPAPER SINCE 1978 OtherPress.e Room 1020 – 700 Royal Ave. Douglas College New Westminster, BC V3L 5B2 TELEPHONE: 604.525.3542 WEBSITE: theotherpress.ca EMAIL: [email protected] STAFF LIST Natalie Serafini Editor-in-Chief [email protected] Eric Wilkins Assistant Editor [email protected] Angela Ho Business Manager Chandler Walter Distribution Manager Mike LeMieux Layout Manager Joel McCarthy Screenshot of ‘Girls’ Graphics Manager Cara Seccafien Production Assistant Nudity and bravery udity is, paradoxically, both belief, and is applauded for her requires bravery. The two aren’t this further by suggesting that Ed Appleby Nemblematic of strength courage in showing what real mutually exclusive, but they a woman’s bravery is associated Illustrator and of vulnerability. Daenerys women’s bodies look like. aren’t the same either. with showing off her body, or Targaryen, (spoilers!) emerging I think we’re confusing the The thing is, I’m technically choosing to forego makeup, Jony Roy from the ashes of her husband’s meaning of being brave—or arguing over a technicality, a or wearing horizontal stripes, Social Media Coordinator ritual cremation with dragon rather, we’ve become confused to difference in synonym where not only demeans women and triplets, represents strength; with the point of perceiving displays bravery and guts are likely linked the definition of bravery, it Angela Espinoza a sense of confidence and self- of reality as courageous. Of in the thesaurus. also belittles female bravery to News Editor assuredness, you feel no shame course it takes a certain amount We’ve devalued women’s physical appearance. -
Publishing Spring 2021
Publishing Spring 2021 It is with great excitement that Royal Museums Greenwich announces the list of publications planned for spring 2021. The list of books presented in this catalogue showcase world-leading expertise, fascinating stories and beautiful artworks inspired by the sea, ships, time and the stars. Every purchase supports the Museum to help fund research, exhibitions and acquisitions. We hope you enjoy reading them as much as we’ve enjoyed producing them. Royal Museums Greenwich Publishing team New titles Stars Planets Pirates Royal Observatory Greenwich Royal Observatory Greenwich Fact and Fiction Illuminates series Illuminates series David Cordingly and John Falconer Dr Greg Brown Dr Emily Drabek-Maunder The image of the pirate is one There are approximately ten-billion- Since ancient times five planets that has never failed to capture trillion stars in the entire observable have been easily visible to the the imagination, but behind the Universe. That’s a little more than naked eye - Mercury, Venus, Mars, melodramatic portrayals of such the number of grains of sand on Jupiter and Saturn. This second villains as Long John Silver lies a all the beaches on Earth. But what book in the Royal Observatory much harsher reality. This book exactly are stars? How long do they Greenwich Illuminates series charts showcases the National Maritime live? How hot are they? The answers humanity’s understanding of our Museum’s vast collection of to these questions and many more neighbouring bodies, from the first artworks and artefacts, charting are answered in the first book in clues established by Galileo Galilei the history of piracy, the popular a series of accessible guides to in the 17th century, through to the portrayal of pirates in literature astronomy, written by astronomers vast amount we do (and much we and cinema, as well as examining at the Royal Observatory Greenwich. -
Tobacco and Its Role in the Life of the Confederacy D
Old Dominion University ODU Digital Commons History Theses & Dissertations History Spring 1993 Tobacco and Its Role in the Life of the Confederacy D. T. Smith Old Dominion University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/history_etds Part of the Economic History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Smith, D. T.. "Tobacco and Its Role in the Life of the Confederacy" (1993). Master of Arts (MA), thesis, History, Old Dominion University, DOI: 10.25777/25rf-3v69 https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/history_etds/30 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the History at ODU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Theses & Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ODU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. TOBACCO AND ITS ROLE IN THE LIFE OF THE CONFEDERACY by D . T . Smith B.A. May 1981, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Old Dominion University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirement for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS HISTORY OLD DOMINION UNIVERSITY May, 1993 Approved by: Harbld S. Wilson (Director) Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Copyright by David Trent Smith © 1993 All Rights Reserved Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. ABSTRACT TOBACCO AND ITS ROLE IN THE LIFE OF THE CONFEDERACY D . T . Smith Old Dominion University, 1993 Director: Dr. Harold S. Wilson This study examines the role that tobacco played in influencing Confederate policy during the American Civil War.