Romantic Poetry

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Romantic Poetry A COMPANION TO ROMANTIC POETRY EDITED BY CHARLES MAHONEY A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication 99781405135542_1_pretoc.indd781405135542_1_pretoc.indd iiiiii 99/24/2010/24/2010 111:28:091:28:09 AAMM pp01.indd01.indd 8 99/27/2010/27/2010 110:57:380:57:38 AAMM A Companion to Romantic Poetry 99781405135542_1_pretoc.indd781405135542_1_pretoc.indd i 99/24/2010/24/2010 111:28:091:28:09 AAMM Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture This series offers comprehensive, newly written surveys of key periods and movements and certain major authors, in English literary culture and history. Extensive volumes provide new perspectives and positions on contexts and on canonical and post-canonical texts, orientating the beginning student in new fi elds of study and providing the experienced undergraduate and new graduate with current and new directions, as pioneered and developed by leading scholars in the fi eld. Published recently 54. A Companion to the History of the English Language Edited by Haruko Momma and Michael Matto 55. A Companion to Henry James Edited by Greg Zacharias 56. A Companion to the British and Irish Short Story Edited by Cheryl Alexander Malcolm and David Malcolm 57. A Companion to Jane Austen Edited by Claudia L. Johnson and Clara Tuite 58. A Companion to the Arthurian Literature Edited by Helen Fulton 59. A Companion to the Modern American Novel 1900–1950 Edited by John T. Matthews 60. A Companion to the Global Renaissance Edited by Jyotsna G. Singh 61. A Companion to Thomas Hardy Edited by Keith Wilson 62. A Companion to T. S. Eliot Edited by David E. Chinitz 63. A Companion to Samuel Beckett Edited by S. E. Gontarski 64. A Companion to Twentieth-Century United States Fiction Edited by David Seed 65. A Companion to Tudor Literature Edited by Kent Cartwright 66. A Companion to Crime Fiction Edited by Charles Rzepka and Lee Horsley 67. A Companion to Medieval Poetry Edited by Corinne Saunders 68. A New Companion to English Renaissance Literature and Culture Edited by Michael Hattaway 69. A Companion to the American Short Story Edited by Alfred Bendixen and James Nagel 70. A Companion to American Literature and Culture Edited by Paul Lauter 71. A Companion to African American Literature Edited by Gene Jarrett 72. A Companion to Irish Literature Edited by Julia M. Wright 73. A Companion to Romantic Poetry Edited by Charles Mahoney 99781405135542_1_pretoc.indd781405135542_1_pretoc.indd iiii 99/24/2010/24/2010 111:28:091:28:09 AAMM A COMPANION TO ROMANTIC POETRY EDITED BY CHARLES MAHONEY A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication 99781405135542_1_pretoc.indd781405135542_1_pretoc.indd iiiiii 99/24/2010/24/2010 111:28:091:28:09 AAMM This edition fi rst published 2011 © 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd except for editorial material and organization © 2011 Charles Mahoney Blackwell Publishing was acquired by John Wiley & Sons in February 2007. Blackwell’s publishing program has been merged with Wiley’s global Scientifi c, Technical, and Medical business to form Wiley-Blackwell. Registered Offi ce John Wiley & Sons Ltd, The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, United Kingdom Editorial Offi ces 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148-5020, USA 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford, OX4 2DQ, UK The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, UK For details of our global editorial offi ces, for customer services, and for information about how to apply for permission to reuse the copyright material in this book please see our website at www.wiley.com/wiley-blackwell. The right of Charles Mahoney to be identifi ed as the author of the editorial material in this work has been asserted in accordance with the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, except as permitted by the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, without the prior permission of the publisher. Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books. Designations used by companies to distinguish their products are often claimed as trademarks. All brand names and product names used in this book are trade names, service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The publisher is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book. This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold on the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering professional services. If professional advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A companion to romantic poetry / edited by Charles Mahoney. p. cm. – (Blackwell companions to literature and culture ; 73) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-4051-3554-2 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. English poetry–19th century–History and criticism–Handbooks, manuals, etc. 2. English poetry–18th century–History and criticism–Handbooks, manuals, etc. 3. Romanticism–Great Britain–Handbooks, manuals, etc. I. Mahoney, Charles, 1964– PR590.C58 2010 821′.709145–dc22 2010033795 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. This book is published in the following electronic formats: ePDFs 978-1-4443-9063-6; Wiley Online Library 978-1-4443-9065-0; ePub 978-1-4443-9064-3 Set in 11/13pt Garamond 3 by SPi Publisher Services, Pondicherry, India 1 2011 99781405135542_1_pretoc.indd781405135542_1_pretoc.indd iivv 99/24/2010/24/2010 111:28:101:28:10 AAMM Contents List of Illustrations viii Notes on Contributors ix Acknowledgments xiv Introduction 1 Charles Mahoney Part I Forms and Genres 7 1 Mournful Ditties and Merry Measures: Feeling and Form in the Romantic Short Lyric and Song 9 Michael O’Neill 2 Archaist-Innovators: The Couplet from Churchill to Browning 25 Simon Jarvis 3 The Temptations of Tercets 44 Charles Mahoney 4 To Scorn or To “Scorn not the Sonnet” 62 Daniel Robinson 5 Ballad Collection and Lyric Collectives 78 Steve Newman 6 Satire, Subjectivity, and Acknowledgment 95 William Flesch 7 “Stirring shades”: The Romantic Ode and Its Afterlives 107 Esther Schor 99781405135542_2_toc.indd781405135542_2_toc.indd v 99/24/2010/24/2010 111:28:211:28:21 AAMM vi Contents 8 Pastures New and Old: The Romantic Afterlife of Pastoral Elegy 123 Christopher R. Miller 9 The Romantic Georgic and the Work of Writing 140 Tim Burke 10 Shepherding Culture and the Romantic Pastoral 159 John Bugg 11 Ear and Eye: Counteracting Senses in Loco-descriptive Poetry 176 Adam Potkay Part II Production and Distribution, Schools and Movements 195 12 “Other voices speak”: The Poetic Conversations of Byron and Shelley 197 Simon Bainbridge 13 The Thrush in the Theater: Keats and Hazlitt at the Surrey Institution 217 Sarah M. Zimmerman 14 Laboring-Class Poetry in the Romantic Era 234 Michael Scrivener 15 Celtic Romantic Poetry: Scotland, Ireland, Wales 251 Jane Moore 16 Anglo-Jewish Romantic Poetry 268 Karen Weisman 17 Leigh Hunt’s Cockney Canon: Sociability and Subversion from Homer to Hyperion 285 Michael Tomko 18 Poetry, Conversation, Community: Annus Mirabilis, 1797–1798 302 Emily Sun Part III Contemporary Contexts and Perspectives 319 19 Spontaneity, Immediacy, and Improvisation in Romantic Poetry 321 Angela Esterhammer 20 Celebrity, Gender, and the Death of the Poet: The Mystery of Letitia Elizabeth Landon 337 Ghislaine McDayter 21 Poetry and Illustration: “Amicable strife” 354 Sophie Thomas 99781405135542_2_toc.indd781405135542_2_toc.indd vvii 99/24/2010/24/2010 111:28:211:28:21 AAMM Contents vii 22 Romanticism, Sport, and Late Georgian Poetry 374 John Strachan 23 “The science of feelings”: Wordsworth’s Experimental Poetry 393 Ross Hamilton 24 Romanticism, Gnosticism, and Neoplatonism 412 Laura Quinney 25 Milton and the Romantics 425 Gordon Teskey Part IV Critical Issues and Current Debates 443 26 “The feel of not to feel it,” or the Pleasures of Enduring Form 445 Anne-Lise François 27 Romantic Poetry and Literary Theory: The Case of “A slumber did my spirit seal” 467 Marc Redfi eld 28 “Strange utterance”: The (Un)Natural Language of the Sublime in Wordsworth’s Prelude 483 Timothy Bahti 29 The Matter of Genre in the Romantic Sublime 503 Ian Balfour 30 Sexual Politics and the Performance of Gender in Romantic Poetry 521 James Najarian 31 Blake’s Jerusalem: Friendship with Albion 538 Karen Swann 32 The World without Us: Romanticism, Environmentalism, and Imagining Nature 554 Bridget Keegan 33 Ethical Supernaturalism: The Romanticism of Wordsworth, Heaney, and Lacan 572 Guinn Batten 34 The Persistence of Romanticism 589 Willard Spiegelman Index 606 99781405135542_2_toc.indd781405135542_2_toc.indd vviiii 99/24/2010/24/2010 111:28:211:28:21 AAMM Illustrations 10.1 Contemporary tracts documenting various kinds of British sheep in close detail; figures engraved on wood by Thomas Bewick 163 21.1 Thomas Rowlandson, “Doctor Syntax Sketching after Nature”; etching 359 21.2 William Blake, illustration for Edward Young’s Night Thoughts (1797) 362 21.3 William Blake, title page for The Book of Thel (1789) 363 21.4 Thomas Stothard, illustration for “Christabel” 365 21.5 George Beaumont, frontispiece for Wordsworth’s The White Doe of Rylstone (1815) 367 21.6 J. M. W. Turner, Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage – Italy 369 22.1 Portrait of Thomas Cribb, the British Champion, 1811 379 99781405135542_3_posttoc.indd781405135542_3_posttoc.indd vviiiiii 99/24/2010/24/2010 111:28:331:28:33 AAMM Notes on Contributors Timothy Bahti, formerly Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Michigan and now an independent scholar, is the author of Allegories of History: Literary Historiography after Hegel (1992), Ends of the Lyric: Direction and Consequence in Western Poetry (1996), and some forty articles on poetry, philosophy, and literary theory.
Recommended publications
  • University of Maryland Commencement May 22, 2020
    University of Maryland Commencemenmay 22, 2020 Table of Contents CONGRATULATIONS BACHELOR’S DEGREES From the President 1 Agriculture and Natural Resources, From the Alumni Association President 2 College of 24 Architecture, Planning and SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES Preservation, School of 25 Graduating Student Speaker 4 Arts and Humanities, College of 25 University Medalists 5 Behavioral and Social Sciences, Honorary Degree Recipients 7 College of 29 Commencement Speaker 9 Business, Robert H. Smith School of 35 Computer, Mathematical, and DOCTORAL DEGREES 10 Natural Sciences, College of 42 Education, College of 48 MASTER’S DEGREES 15 Engineering, A. James Clark School of 49 Graduate Certificates 22 Information Studies, College of 52 Journalism, Philip Merrill College of 53 Public Health, School of 54 Public Policy, School of 56 THE “DO GOOD” CAMPUS Undergraduate Studies 56 Certificate Programs 56 The University of Maryland commits to becoming HONORS COLLEGE, CITATION AND a global leader in advancing social innovation, NOTATION PROGRAMS, AND ACADEMIC AND SPECIAL AWARDS philanthropy and nonprofit leadership with its Do Honors College 57 Good Campus. CIVICUS 59 College Park Scholars 59 Beyond the Classroom 62 Our Do Good Campus effort amplifies the power of Federal Fellows 62 Terps as agents of social innovation and supports First-Year Innovation and Research Experience 62 the university’s mission of service. We’re working to Global Communities 63 ensure all University of Maryland students graduate Global Fellows 63 equipped and motivated to do good in their careers, Hinman CEOs 63 Immigration and Migration Studies 63 their communities and the world. Jiménez-Porter Writers’ House 63 Language House 63 Ronald E.
    [Show full text]
  • Sacred Heart Church 301 Ann Street Newburgh, New York 12550
    Sacred Heart Church 301 Ann Street Newburgh, New York 12550 Phone: 845-561-2264 Fax: 845-562-7144 Website: http://Sacredheartnewburgh.org E-mail: [email protected] Fourth Sunday of Advent December 18, 2016 They shall name him Emmanuel, which means “God is with us.” — Matthew 1:23 December 18, 2016 Welcome to Sacred Heart Church Page 1 CELEBRATION OF SACRAMENTS BAPTISM: Communal celebrations of Baptism take place Saturday Evening: 5:00 PM on the first and third Sundays at 2:00 PM. To arrange a Bap- Sunday:10:00AM, 12:00PM tism, please call the Rectory. A Baptismal Instruction Session is 1st Sunday 8:00 AM Italian/English Mass required before the Baptism. Because Godparents play an im- Monday-Saturday: 9:00 AM in the Chapel portant role in the child’s Christian life and education, Godpar- Holy Days of Obligation: Mass times will be listed in ents must be practicing Catholics who have been confirmed, the bulletin on the Sunday prior to the holy day. are at least 16 years of age and, if married, must be in a mar- riage recognized by the Catholic Church. If there is a question about the suitability of someone to be a Godparent, please call the Rectory before asking the person to be a Godparent. Pastoral and Administrative Staff RECONCILIATION: The Sacrament of Penance takes place Rev. Andrew Kurzyna, Pastor on Saturdays from 4:00 to 4:45 PM. At other times, the person Rev. Bejoy Thomas Valliyil, CMI Parochial Vicar should make the request directly to a priest. Peter R.C.
    [Show full text]
  • November 21,1895
    ME 07. 0U BELFAST, MAINE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1895. NUMBER 47. Fish and Game. Capt. Benjamin At- Obituary. North port Mews. COUNTY CORRESPONDENCE. East Searsmont. Mrs. Journal. wood of Emily Arnold Personal. iifpuMuau Winterport, State game warden, has returned was in from a two weeks’ visit in Bangor Friday, on his return from Mr. Leonard Brooks Cobbett died in Bel- M. I. Stevens is teaching school at Beech- Belmont. Mr. Willis Sanborn of Morrill Franklin, S. H. Mathews went to Boston on EH V THURSDAY MORNING BY THE a the hill. Mass.Charles Mahoney of Monday trip along Canadian Pacific railway. fast Sunday, Nov. 17th, at the advanced age visited friends in town Sunday_The is business. Capt. Atwood that the recent snows Northport visiting his brother Arad_ says of 95 years and 16 He was born in Mess Bessie Patterson is friends North Belmont Association will have days. visiting Cemetery Oscar Hills and helped the hunters considerably. in wife of East Northport H. C. Pitcher was in Portland last week Lowell, Mass., but came to Belfast when Camden. have a sociable at Mystic Hall Tues- Last week he one Grange were in town Joiimal Co. arrested of the promi- last week, the guests of her on business. FibMlui about 10 years of age, which has been his Now don’t forget that the heavy rain of day evening, Nov. 26th, for the purpose of Ullicai nent citizens of Jackman for illegal fish- brother, Edgar P. Wm. Friday, Nov. 15, was accompanied by Mahoney_Mrs. S. Samuel Morse went to ing. The man a fine of £100.
    [Show full text]
  • 2006 Purdue U
    2006 Conference Committee Our Generous Sponsors Dino Franco Felluga, Main Organizer Provost’s Office, Purdue U Emily Allen, Co-Organizer College of Liberal Arts, Purdue U Purdue University Libraries NASSR VETTING COMMITTEE English Dept., Purdue U Geraldine Friedman (Co-Chair) History Dept., Purdue U Arkady Plotnitsky (Co-Chair) Philosophy & Literature Program, Purdue U Beate Allert Art History, Visual & Performing Arts, Purdue U Dino Franco Felluga Theater, Visual & Performing Arts, Purdue U Jason Goldsmith French, Foreign Languages & Literatures, Purdue U German, Foreign Languages & Literatures, Purdue U NASSR EXECUTIVE COUNCIL LIAISONS Comparative Literature Program, Purdue U Jan Plug Tilottama Rajan and NAVSA VETTING COMMITTEE English Dept., Butler U Emily Allen (Chair) English Dept., Indiana U Tom Broden Victorian Studies Program, Indiana U Dino Franco Felluga Indiana U Press Andrew Miller English Dept., Loyola U, Chicago Chris Vanden Bossche English Dept., Michigan State U Whitney Walton English Dept., Northwestern U Theater Dept., Northwestern U PURDUE CONFERENCE SERVICES English Dept., U of Chicago Kathryn R. Walters, Conference Coordinator English Dept., U of Illinois, Chicago Lisa Peters, Assistant Coordinator English Dept., U of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign History Dept., U of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign GRADUATE-STUDENT ASSISTANT English Dept., U of Chicago Julie Barst College of Arts & Sciences, U of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign English Dept., U of Iowa GRADUATE-STUDENT VOLUNTEERS English Dept., U of Michigan Erin Chamberlain College of Arts & Letters, U of Notre Dame Oana Chivoiu Tracy Collins Kristi Embry Martin Fashbaugh Laura Kealey Laura Stef-Praun April Toadvine Special Thanks to: Provost Sally Frost Mason, Purdue Former Dean of Liberal Arts, Toby Parcel, Purdue Current Dean of Liberal Arts, John Contreni, Purdue Dean of Purdue U Libraries, James Mullins, Purdue English Department Head, Irwin Weiser, Purdue History Department Head, R.
    [Show full text]
  • Robertson Duncan Francis Sec
    THE SASKATCHEWAN PROVINCIAL POLICE 1917 - 1928 A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies in Partial fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in the Department of History University of Saskatchewan by Duncan Francis Robertson Saskatoon, Saskatchewan March, 1976 Uj\JI'/~?~ITY-'"'\ L It':-'l/\F{Y ~ D.F. Robertson, 1976 778962 The author has agreed that the Library, University of Saskatchewan, may make this thesis freely available for inspection. .~oreover, the author has agreed that permission for extensive copying of. this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the professor or professors who supervised, the thesis work recorded herein or, in their absence, by the Head of the Department or the Dean of the College in which the thesis work was done. It is understood that due recognition will be given to the author of this thesis and to the University of Saskatchewan in any use of the material in this thesis. Copying or publication or any other use of the thesis for financial gain without approval by the University of Saskatchewan and the author's written permission is prohibited. Requests for permission to copy or to make any other use of material in this thesis in whole or in part should be addressed to: The Head of the Department of History, The University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N OWO. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ••.................... PREFACE .. ... .. .. i i CHAPTER I The R.N.W.M.P. in Saskatchewan 1 CHAPTER II Establishment of the S.P.P. 14 CHAPTER III Enforcement of Liquor Legislation 24 CHAPTER IV Major Cases and Routine ....
    [Show full text]
  • Reconsidering Justice Gabriel Duvall's Slavery Law Opinions
    Not the Most Insignificant Justice: Reconsidering Justice Gabriel Duvall’s Slavery Law Opinions Favoring Liberty ANDREW T. FEDE Joseph Story and Gabriel Duvall began later so deaf that he could not hear a word said their careers as Supreme Court Justices on the in Court[.]”1 Others based later critiques on same day in February 1812, but the reputa- the dearth of Duvall’s published Supreme tions of these nominees of President James Court output—fifteen opinions for the Court Madison diverged widely. Story is ranked and one dissenting opinion—although they among the Court’s leading Justices. Duvall’s acknowledged that, during this era, Chief standing, in contrast, fell so far by the 1930s Justice John Marshall dominated the Court that Ernest Sutherland Bates, in his book with his collegial approach to decision The Story of the Supreme Court, labeled making and opinion writing.2 him “probably the most insignificant of all On the other hand, Irving Dilliard, who Supreme Court judges[.]” Bates implied that, wrote the entry on Duvall in The Justices at nearly sixty years of age, Duvall was too of the United States Supreme Court old when he was nominated to the Court; he 1789-1969, accused Bates of making “a thus devalued Duvall’s nearly twenty-four manifestly unfair judgment” about Duvall’s years as a Maryland lawyer, state court judge, almost twenty-three-year career on the and legislator; his two years as a United States Court.3 Indeed, Duvall deserves further Congressman; and his nine years as the first reevaluation, but not because of the recently Comptroller of the United States Treasury.
    [Show full text]
  • North American Society for the Study of Romanticism
    THE 21st ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE North American Society for the Study of Romanticism BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS August 7-11, 2013 ROMANTIC MOVEMENTS SPONSORED BY BOSTON UNIVERSITY AND THE COLLEGE OF THE HOLY CROSS Conference Organizers: Charles Rzepka (Boston University) Jonathan Mulrooney (College of the Holy Cross) Conference Coordinator: Deborah Weiner Conference Committee: Joselyn Almeida-Beveridge, UMass, Amherst Yoon Sun Lee, Wellesley College Jeffrey Bernstein, College of the Holy Cross Marjorie Levinson, University of Michigan Matthew Borushko, Stonehill College Charles Mahoney, University of Connecticut Elizabeth Fay, UMass, Boston Richard Matlak, College of The Holy Cross Marilyn Gaull, The Editorial Institute, BU Shawn Maurer, College of the Holy Cross Debra Gettelman, College of the Holy Cross Tilar Mazzeo, Colby College Bruce Graver, Providence College Magda Ostas, Boston University Sonia Hofkosh, Tufts University Stuart Peterfreund, Northeastern University Noel Jackson, Mass. Institute of Technology Joseph Rezek, Boston University J. Jennifer Jones, University of Rhode Island Alan Richardson, Boston College Maurice Lee, Boston University Andrew Warren, Harvard University Conference support generously provided by: Boston University College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University Center for the Humanities, College of the Holy Cross President’s Office, College of the Holy Cross Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean Additional Support provided by: Boston University English Department, College of the Holy Cross English Department, The Editorial Institute at Boston University Wednesday, August 7 5:00-8:00pm: Registration (GSU Stone Lobby) 10:00am-5:00pm: Concord Expedition Thursday, August 8 8:30am-5:00pm Book Exhibit (GSU Ziskind Lounge) 8:30am-5:30pm: Registration (GSU Stone Lobby) 9:15-10:30am: Concurrent Sessions 1 1A.
    [Show full text]
  • Wales & Herefordshire
    Wales & Herefordshire ORDO 2014 (calendar without full notes) THE ORDER TO BE OBSERVED FOR THE CELEBRATION OF MASS AND THE LITURGY OF THE HOURS IN THE ARCHDIOCESE OF CARDIFF, THE DIOCESE OF MENEVIA AND THE DIOCESE OF WREXHAM, IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD 2014 GUIDE TO USING THE ORDER In the calendar which follows: + indicates a HOLY DAY OF OBLIGATION. Entries under the rubric EVENING prescribe both the Liturgy of the Hours to be celebrated for Evening Prayer and Night Prayer, and also the Mass to be used if Mass is celebrated later than Evening Prayer. This Order is meant to be used in conjunction with the liturgical books, and in general, rubrics printed clearly alongside the texts in the Roman Missal and Divine Office will not be duplicated here. The Gloria is always said on weekdays designated FEAST; this is not explicitly mentioned in the calendar below, but every Sunday and Solemnity will be annotated with explicit mention of the Gloria (when required) and Creed. Where page numbers are given, M&EP indicates Morning and Evening Prayer (not to be confused with the abridged Shorter Morning and Evening Prayer); DP indicates Daily Prayer (the volume which includes Prayer During the Day); and DO-I, DO-II and DO-III the three volume set of The Divine Office. Note that some volumes include three sequences of page numbering – one plain, another marked by an asterisk (*) and the third by square brackets [ ]. RM indicates the current edition of the Roman Missal, internally indicated as the 2010 edition though actually published in 2011.
    [Show full text]
  • United States Defence Contractors and the Future of Military Operations
    Defense & Security Analysis ISSN: 1475-1798 (Print) 1475-1801 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cdan20 United States defence contractors and the future of military operations Charles W. Mahoney To cite this article: Charles W. Mahoney (2020): United States defence contractors and the future of military operations, Defense & Security Analysis, DOI: 10.1080/14751798.2020.1750182 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/14751798.2020.1750182 Published online: 20 Apr 2020. Submit your article to this journal View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=cdan20 DEFENSE & SECURITY ANALYSIS https://doi.org/10.1080/14751798.2020.1750182 United States defence contractors and the future of military operations Charles W. Mahoney Department of Political Science, California State University, Long Beach, CA, USA ABSTRACT KEYWORDS The United States’ global strategic outlook has shifted markedly Defense contractors; private since the end of major combat operations in Iraq and military and security Afghanistan. As the United States’ strategic posture shifts, the companies; Cyber operations; nature of military operations is simultaneously changing rapidly. drones; outsourcing; United States Many analysts predict that cyber-operations, autonomous weapons systems, artificial intelligence, and clandestine special forces operations will be central features in future conflicts. Although often overlooked by scholars and policy analysts, defence contractors are integral to the development and implementation of these emerging categories of warfare. This inquiry examines the evolving nature of the American defence industry and the roles corporations play in current theatres of conflict.
    [Show full text]
  • COLORADO GIRL Descrtres SPANISH TRAGEDY
    COLORADO GIRL DESCRtRES SPANISH TRAGEDY Contents Copyrighted by the Catholic Press Society, Inc., 1938—Permission to Reproduce, Excepting on Articles Otherwise Marked, Given After 12 M. Friday Following Issue CacMic Qirl Wm Have Part EYE-WITNESS DENVER CATHOLIC In Central City Production Qp FIRST ACTS Below: The historical Central City Opera house, sum­ mer theater capital of U. S. Upper left: Bramwell IN REVOLUTION Fletcher and Helen Chandler. Lower right: Robert Edmond Jones, 1938 producer. Spent Well Over Year in Country; Saw REGISTER' t Churches Burned to Ground; Priest 1^' The National Catholic Welfare Conference News Service Supplies The Denver Catholic Register. We Have Shot Down Also the International News service (Wjre and Mail), a Large Special Service, and Seven Smaller Services. (Miss Firginia McKay, Colorado Springs Catholic girl, has Just VOL. XXXIII. No. 47. DENVER, COLO., THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1938. $2 PER YEAR returned from three years abroad—a year and seven months of it in Spain, where she saw the Civil war on both sides, lived in cities that were bombarded from the air and by armies, saw and met leaders of both sides, and studied the problems of the nation. The following story tells some of her experiences in Spain, The article is copy­ STREET PREACHERS SET righted, with all rights reserved.) ...it (By ViRQjNiA McKay) Registorials This is a story of one of history’s crudest and strangest NEW ATTENDANCE MARK; revolutions— the Spanish tragedy! It is an eye-witness’ ac­ WAGE-HOUR LAW EPOCHAL count of how social doctrines and principles really look IN PUBLIC MORALITY in action.
    [Show full text]
  • 1969-06-01 University of Notre Dame Commencement Program
    One Hundred and Twenty-fourth Commencement Exercises OFFICIAL JUNE EXERCISES THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME NomE DAME_, INDIANA THE GRADUATE ScHOOL THE LAw ScHooL THE CoLLEGE oF ARTs AND LETTERS THE CoLLEGE oF SciENCE THE CoLLEGE oF ENGINEERING The Graduate and Undergraduate Divisions of THE CoLLEGE OF BusiNEss ADMINISTRATION ' Athletic and Convocation Center L At 2:00 p.m. (Eastern Daylight Time) Sunday, June 1, 1969 ..... PROGRAM PRocEsSIONAL CITATIONs FOR HoNORARY DEGREES by the Reverend John E. Walsh, C.S.C., Ph.D. Vice-President of Academic Affairs THE CoNFERRING OF HoNORARY DEGREES by the Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., Ph.D. President of the University PRESENTATION OF CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES by the Reverend Paul E. Beichner, C.S.C., Ph.D. Dean of the Graduate School by William B. Lawless, LL.M. Dean of the Law School by Frederick J. Crosson, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Arts and Letters by Bernard Waldman, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Science by Joseph C. Hogan, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Engineering by Thomas T. Murphy, M.C.S. Dean of the College of Business Administration THE CONFERRING OF DEGREES by the Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., Ph.D. President of the University PRESENTATION OF THE FACULTY AwARD PRESENTATION OF THE PROFESSOR THOMAS MADDEN FACULTY AwARD CoMMENCEMENT AnDREss by Dr. Daniel P. Moynihan Assistant to the President for Urban Affairs Washington, D.C. THE BLESSING by His Eminence George B. Cardinal Flahiff Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada NoTRE DAME, OuR MoTHER-ORCHESTRA AND AuDmNcE (Words are on inside baek cover.) RECESSIONAL OF THE PLATFORM PARTY Degrees Conferred The University of Notre Dame announces the conferring of The Degree of Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, on: His Eminence George B.
    [Show full text]
  • The Joice & Mahoney Families
    The Joice & Mahoney Families The Joice and Mahoney families from Prince George's County, Maryland, and Washington, DC, sued for their freedom between 1791-1808, claiming they were descended from a free woman named Ann Joice. These cases and the families who brought them were important in American history. w Charles Mahoney v. John Ashton (Prince George's County, MD, 1791) w Patrick Mahoney v. John Ashton (Prince George's County, MD, 1791) w Daniel Mahoney v. John Ashton (Prince George's County, MD, 1791) w John Hickman v. Richard Smith (Prince George's County, MD, 1791 ?) w James Joice v. Sarah Walker (Prince George's County, 1796) w Eleanor Joice v. Notley Young (Prince George's County, 1796) w Catharine Joice v. Notley Young (Prince George's County, 1796) w Richard Joice v. Richard Wootton (Prince George's County, 1796) w John Joice v. Richard Wootton (Prince George's County, 1796) w Thomas Joice v. John Hill (Prince George's County, 1796) w Michael Joice v. John Hill (Prince George's County, 1796) w Jack Joice v. Robert Tilley & Richard Walker, executors of Isaac Walker (Prince George's County, 1796) w Clem Joice v. Robert Alexander (Washington, DC, 1808) w Becky Joice v. William Jenkins (Washington, DC, 1808) If you have any information to contribute to the project about this family, please let us know. William G. Thomas III [email protected] (402) 472-2414 earlywashingtondc.org The Joice & Mahoney Families The Joice and Mahoney family tree is based on court records from the Maryland State Archives in Annapolis.
    [Show full text]