Reading Group Discussion Questions—My Beloved World
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By Patrick James Barry a Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of The
CONFIRMATION BIAS: STAGED STORYTELLING IN SUPREME COURT CONFIRMATION HEARINGS by Patrick James Barry A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (English Language and Literature) in the University of Michigan 2015 Doctoral Committee: Professor Enoch Brater, Chair Associate Professor Martha Jones Professor Sidonie Smith Emeritus Professor James Boyd White TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER 1 SITES OF THEATRICALITY 1 CHAPTER 2 SITES OF STORYTELLING 32 CHAPTER 3 THE TAUNTING OF AMERICA: THE SUPREME COURT CONFIRMATION HEARING OF ROBERT BORK 55 CHAPTER 4 POISON IN THE EAR: THE SUPREME COURT CONFIRMATION HEARING OF CLARENCE THOMAS 82 CHAPTER 5 THE WISE LATINA: THE SUPREME COURT CONFIRMATION HEARING OF SONIA SOTOMAYOR 112 CHAPTER 6 CONCLUSION: CONFIRMATION CRITIQUE 141 WORK CITED 166 ii CHAPTER 1 SITES OF THEATRICALITY The theater is a place where a nation thinks in public in front of itself. --Martin Esslin, An Anatomy of Drama (1977)1 The Supreme Court confirmation process—once a largely behind-the-scenes affair—has lately moved front-and-center onto the public stage. --Laurence Tribe, Advice and Consent (1992)2 I. In 1975 Milner Ball, then a law professor at the University of Georgia, published an article in the Stanford Law Review called “The Play’s the Thing: An Unscientific Reflection on Trials Under the Rubric of Theater.” In it, Ball argued that by looking at the actions that take place in a courtroom as a “type of theater,” we might better understand the nature of these actions and “thereby make a small contribution to an understanding of the role of law in our society.”3 At the time, Ball’s view that courtroom action had an important “theatrical quality”4 was a minority position, even a 1 Esslin, Martin. -
© 2016 Thomson Reuters. No Claim to Original U.S. Government Works. 1 Sahhar, Dianna 9/16/2016 for Educational Use Only
Sahhar, Dianna 9/16/2016 For Educational Use Only End of an era for Supreme Court: Erwin Chemerinsky: End..., 2016 WLNR 20406062 7/5/16 Lima News (Ohio) (Pg. Unavail. Online) 2016 WLNR 20406062 Lima News, The (Ohio) Copyright (c) 2016 Newsbank July 5, 2016 Section: opinion opinion_columns End of an era for Supreme Court: Erwin Chemerinsky: End of an era for Supreme Court Erwin Chemerinsky, Los Angeles Times After 45 years with a conservative majority, the Supreme Court appears to be entering a very different era. The major rulings of this just-completed Supreme Court term show there are no longer five votes for a conservative result - a historic shift. From the time President Richard Nixon's fourth court nominee was confirmed in 1971 until Justice Antonin Scalia's death in February, there have always been five ideologically conservative Republican appointees on the bench. No longer. Indeed, if Hillary Clinton is elected president in November, a liberal majority may dominate the court for decades to come. The decisions over this term might have looked like a mixed bag of liberal and conservative outcomes. But a clear pattern was at work. When Justice Anthony M. Kennedy joined with Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen G. Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, they formed a liberal majority. When Kennedy voted with the conservative bloc - Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. and Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. - the court almost always split 4-4. When there is a deadlock, the lower court ruling is affirmed, but without setting any Supreme Court precedent. -
Celebrity Justice Supreme Court Edition
CELEBRITY JUSTICE SUPREME COURT EDITION Richard L. Hasen† T IS NOT YOUR IMAGINATION. Supreme Court Justices are in the news more than ever, whether they are selling books, testifying before Congress, addressing a Federalist Society or American Constitution Society event, or just talking to a Muppet on Sesame Street.1 The Inumber of books about the Court and particular Justices continues to grow. A website (www.scotusmap.com) is now devoted to tracking the Justices’ movements as they crisscross the country (and the world) speaking to various audiences. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is even promoted on T- shirts as the “Notorious R.B.G.,”2 a riff on the name of famous rap artist Notorious B.I.G. She will soon be the topic of a biopic starring Natalie Portman.3 † Richard L. Hasen is Chancellor’s Professor of Law and Political Science at the UC Irvine School of Law. Copyright 2016 Richard L. Hasen. 1 Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor Visits ‘Sesame Street’ to Talk About Careers, HUFFINGTON POST, Nov. 11, 2012, www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/11/supreme-court-justice- sonia-sotomayor-sesame-street_n_2113625.html. 2 Dahlia Lithwick, Justice LOLZ Grumpycat Notorious R.B.G., SLATE, Mar. 26, 2015, www. slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2015/03/notorious_r_b_g_history_the_origins _and_meaning_of_ruth_bader_ginsburg_s.html; see also notoriousrbg.tumblr.com. 3 Lanie Goodman, Natalie Portman on Directing Her First Film and Playing Ruth Bader Ginsburg, WALL ST. J., Speakeasy Blog, May 19, 2015, blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2015/05/19/ natalie-portman-on-directing-her-first-film-and-playing-ruth-bader-ginsburg/. 19 GREEN BAG 2D 157 Richard L. -
A PDF of the Entire Essay
THE WAY PAVERS: ELEVEN SUPREME COURT-WORTHY WOMEN * MEG PENROSE Introduction Four women have served as associate justices on the United States Supreme Court. Since the Court’s inception in 1789, more than 160 individuals have been nominated to serve as Supreme Court justices.1 Five nominees, or roughly 3 percent, have been women.2 To help put this gender dearth in perspective, more men named “Samuel” have served as Supreme Court justices than women.3 Thirteen U.S. presidents have each nominated more people to the Supreme Court than the total number of women that have served on the Court.4 Finally, there are currently as many Catholics serving on the Supreme Court as the number of women confirmed in the Court’s entire history.5 Women, once thought of as “one-at-a-time-curiosities” on the bench, now constitute nearly one-third of all state and federal judges.6 They occupy the highest posts on state supreme courts and can be found, in similar numbers, at the trial and appellate * Meg Penrose is a full Professor at Texas A&M University School of Law. Her teaching focuses on constitutional law, federal criminal procedure and the judiciary. She is a member of the American Law Institute and a Life Fellow with the American Bar Foundation. She is grateful to two way-paving judges that helped shaped her own career, the Honorable Sarah T. Hughes (the first judge Meg ever met) and the Honorable Jane J. Boyle, U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of Texas. In addition, Meg would like to thank her judicial co-clerk from many years ago, the extraordinary Wendy Davis. -
To View This Issue of Political Report As An
Volume 5, Issue 6 • June 2009 Obama in Motion Views about how President Barack Obama is handling his responsibilities as president are generally positive, although negative impressions about his handling of the economy have risen. Favorable impressions of Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden have dropped, but Michelle Obama is more popular than four months ago and more popular than her husband. Nearly six in ten view the Democratic Party favorably; four in ten give that response about the GOP. Q: Do you approve or disapprove of the way Barack Obama is handling . ? ——His job as president—— ———Foreign affairs——— ———The economy——— Approve Disapprove Approve Disapprove Approve Disapprove February 2009 63% 26% 54% 22% 59% 30% May 2009 61 34 59 32 55 42 Note: In the late May poll, 55 percent approved of the job the president was doing handling terrorism, while 37 percent disapproved. Forty- six percent approved of his handling the budget deficit (48 percent disapproved). Forty-five percent approved of his efforts to control federal spending, while 51 percent disapproved. Source: Gallup/USA Today. Q: As I read some names, please tell me if you have a . ? ———Barack Obama——— ————Joe Biden———— ———Michelle Obama——— Favorable Unfavorable Favorable Unfavorable Favorable Unfavorable January 2009 78% 18% 63% 20% 68% 18% May 2009 67 32 April 51 28 76 13 Source: Gallup/USA Today. Source: PSRA/Pew Research Center. Q: I’d like to get your opinion of some groups and organizations. Is your overall opinion of . ? Favorable Unfavorable Favorable Unfavorable The Democratic Party The Republican Party January 2009 62% 32% January 2009 40% 55% April 2009 59 34 April 2009 40 51 Source: PSRA/Pew Research Center. -
(Candace Fleming) B EARHART O Tells the Story of Amelia Earhart's Life - As a Child, a Woman, and a Pilot - and Describes the Search for Her Missing Plane
Real Life Rebels Amelia Lost: The life and Disappearance of Amelia Earhart (Candace Fleming) B EARHART o Tells the story of Amelia Earhart's life - as a child, a woman, and a pilot - and describes the search for her missing plane. Bad Girls: Sirens, Jezebels, Murderesses, Thieves & other Female Villains (Jane Yolen) 920.72 Y o Harlot or hero? Liar or lady? There are two sides to every story. Meet twenty-six of history's most notorious women, and debate alongside authors Yolen and Stemple--who appear in the book as themselves in a series of comic panels--as to each girl's guilt or innocence. Being Jazz: My Life as a Transgender Teen (Jazz Jennings) B JENNINGS o Teen activist and trailblazer Jazz Jennings--named one of "The 25 most influential teens" of the year by Time--shares her very public transgender journey, as she inspires people to accept the differences in others while they embrace their own truths. Brown Girl Dreaming (Jacqueline Woodson) B WOODSON o The author shares her childhood memories and reveals the first sparks that ignited her writing career in free-verse poems about growing up in the North and South Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice (Phillip Hoose) CD 323.092 H o On March 2, 1955, a slim, bespectacled teenager refused to give up her seat to a white woman on a segregated bus in Montgomery, Alabama. Shouting 'It's my constitutional right!' as police dragged her off to jail, Claudette Colvin decided she'd had enough of the Jim Crow segregation laws that had angered and puzzled her since she was a young child. -
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Supreme Court's Feminist Icon, Is Dead at 87
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Supreme Court’s Feminist Icon, Is Dead at 87 By Linda Greenhouse The New York Times Sept. 18, 2020 Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the second woman to serve on the Supreme Court and a pioneering advocate for women’s rights, who in her ninth decade became a much younger generation’s unlikely cultural icon, died on Friday at her home in Washington. She was 87. The cause was complications of metastatic pancreatic cancer, the Supreme Court said. By the time two small tumors were found in one of her lungs in December 2018, during a follow-up scan for broken ribs suffered in a recent fall, Justice Ginsburg had beaten colon cancer in 1999 and early-stage pancreatic cancer 10 years later. She received a coronary stent to clear a blocked artery in 2014. Barely five feet tall and weighing 100 pounds, Justice Ginsburg drew comments for years on her fragile appearance. But she was tough, working out regularly with a trainer, who published a book about his famous client’s challenging exercise regime. As Justice Ginsburg passed her 80th birthday and 20th anniversary on the Supreme Court bench during President Barack Obama’s second term, she shrugged off a chorus of calls for her to retire in order to give a Democratic president the chance to name her replacement. She planned to stay “as long as I can do the job full steam,” she would say, sometimes adding, “There will be a president after this one, and I’m hopeful that that president will be a fine president.” When Justice Sandra Day O’Connor retired in January 2006, Justice Ginsburg was for a time the only woman on the Supreme Court — hardly a testament to the revolution in the legal status of women that she had helped bring about in her career as a litigator and strategist. -
Administration of Barack H. Obama, 2009 Remarks at the Radio And
Administration of Barack H. Obama, 2009 Remarks at the Radio and Television Correspondents Association Dinner June 19, 2009 The President. Thanks to all of you. Thank you. Please, everybody, have a seat. Before I get started, as the father of two girls, can I just say how incredibly impressive those three young ladies were. Dad would be proud. To Heather and all the others who have made this evening possible, thank you so much. It is wonderful to be here. I want to express my appreciation for the opportunity to tell jokes that weren't funny enough for me to use when we did this 5 weeks ago. [Laughter] Whatever. [Laughter] The jokes may not be as good, but neither is the guest list. [Laughter] I'm just joking. For me, there's no contest. Why bother hanging out with celebrities when I can spend time with the people who made me one? [Laughter] I know where my bread is buttered. Plus, we have our own luminaries here in attendance. The junior Senator from Wyoming, John Barrasso, is here. [At this point, Press Secretary Robert Gibbs came to the podium and whispered in the President's ear.] I'm sorry, John Barasso skipped this evening. [Laughter] Let me tell you, though, for those who haven't met him, John Barrasso is the George Clooney of junior Senators from Wyoming. [Laughter] It is great to be here with so much talent from the world of TV and radio. Despite the flood of new media, I think your programming is more relevant than ever before. -
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor at the Progressive
For release: Contact: December 5, 2012 Randall Morton President, Progressive Forum 713-664-0020 office [email protected] More at www.ProgressiveForumHouston.org Press Protocols: • All print and electronic media representatives sitting through entire presentation must have tickets. • Request press tickets by Thursday January 17 at 3:00 pm. Email credentials to [email protected]. They will be held for pick up at the press table. • All media must arrive by 7:00 pm. Program starts at 7:30, doors will not be open after program starts. • All media representatives must register at media table in lobby at Texas Avenue doors, presenting credentials. • All TV crews must use portable, shoulder cameras. No tripods allowed. Camera position is at rear orchestra at all times. • Electronic media may plug into the multbox at rear orchestra. • Still photography will be allowed 60 seconds in front of the podium when Justice Sotomayor first appears at the podium. • No flash photography at any time. • Media is only allowed in grand foyer and Cullen auditorium. • Justice Sotomayor is not available for interviews in advance or on event day. • All press inquiries and communication must go through only The Progressive Forum. Sonia Sotomayor at the Progressive Forum January 22, 2013 United States Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor will speak at The Progressive Forum on Tuesday, January 22, 2013, at the Wortham Center, Cullen Theater at 7:30. The event marks the launch of her first book, My Beloved World. She will sign books and greet fans at the end of the evening. Tickets range from $14 to $54. -
Sonia Sotomayor
Sonia Sotomayor By: Patryk Zagula Sotomayor’s “World” In the South Bronx ● Sonia Sotomayor resided in the “microcosm” of Hispanic New York City aka. the South Bronx. ● Sotomayor’s mother and father were of Puerto-Rican descent. They left everything behind in Puerto-Rico in hopes of starting a new life in NYC, however, they soon realized that the lifestyle in America would be very expensive to maintain. *father was always in search of a job/family struggled ● The family had no financial support, and was forced to settle into the Bronxdale houses where it was a “safer, cleaner, brighter alternative” according to Sonia’s mother. (Sotomayor, 79). ● Living in the projects kept the Sotomayor's in constant fear because the presence of gangs caused danger and violence. ● These groups were mainly of Dominican and Hispanic descent, and would plague the communities with drugs and violence (Sotomayor, 79) ● Sotomayor would be responsible in investigating criminal activities that would involve these people later in life. Preservation of the Sotomayor’s Culture Heritage ● Tradition and culture was preserved even after the family had assimilated into the American culture. ● Sotomayor’s father would recreate standard Puerto-Rican dishes from memory. These dishes were at par level with abuelita’s kitchen because of the similarities they shared in their food crafts. ● With abuelita’s support, Sonia’s father would make sofrito, “ the Puerto Rican vegetable and spice base that enhances the flavors of any dish” (Sotomayor, 25). Sonia enjoyed these flavours because she would inherit these “adventurous tastes” from them (Sotomayor, 25). ● On occasion, abuelita would encourage the family to sing Spanish poetry while they enjoyed their meals. -
SONIA SOTOMAYOR, DOCTOR of LAWS Sonia Sotomayor Is The
! 0'(-#!0'/'1#"')7!*',/')!'9!$#@0! ! Sonia Sotomayor is the 111th justice of the United States Supreme Court. She is the first Hispanic and the third of four women to serve the nation’s highest court in its 223-year history. Justice Sotomayor was born to Puerto Rican parents who moved to New York during World War II. Together with her younger brother, she grew up in housing projects in the Bronx and often visited family in Puerto Rico, with whom she maintains close ties. Her father spoke only Spanish, and she did not reach fluency in English until after his death when she was nine. Justice Sotomayor was profoundly influenced by her mother, who instilled in her the value of education and inspired her to declare, at age ten, her interest in attending college and becoming an attorney. She was an avid reader with a love of learning. Diagnosed with Type I diabetes at the age of eight, Justice Sotomayor excelled in school despite the challenges of managing her health. She was valedictorian of her Cardinal Spellman High School class and earned a full scholarship to Princeton University, where she graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1976. At Princeton, she pushed the administration to diversify by introducing classes about Latin America and by hiring Latino faculty. At Yale Law School, Justice Sotomayor was an editor of the Yale Law Journal and managing editor of Yale Studies in World Public Order. After graduating in 1979, she worked in the trial division for Robert Morgenthau, the New York County District Attorney, serving as Assistant District Attorney in Manhattan. -
Sonia Sotomayor U.S
SPRING 2019 JUSTICE Sonia Sotomayor U.S. Supreme Court Justice Visits DU Also in this issue: DU Hosts the National Conference on the First Amendment Plans for New UPMC Cooper Fieldhouse Unveiled www.duq.edu 1 DUQUESNE UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE Contents National Conference on 40 the First Amendment Celebrating the Life Justice Sotomayor 8 of Mister Rogers 36 Visits Duquesne Check out new Duquesne University Magazine videos at duq.edu/magazine highlighting: The National Conference on the First Amendment: Bedrock of American Freedoms ..... page 40 The Dukes' Visit to LeBron James' I Promise School ....................................................................page 64 Every Issue Also... Did You Know?......................................15 Creating Knowledge .........................58 4 24 Bluff in Brief ...........................................60 Designing Robots, Working to Unravel Athletics ..................................................62 Exploring Mars and the Mysteries Behind DU in Pictures ......................................65 Extreme Pogo Bags of Bones Alumni Updates ..................................68 Duquesne University assistant Bayer School of Natural and Event Calendar .................................... 72 professor creates opportunities to Environmental Sciences student uses explore the universe. DNA analysis in research. Facebook “f” Logo CMYK / .eps Facebook “f” Logo CMYK / .eps Vol. 17, Number 2, Spring ’19, Duquesne University Magazine is published by the Office of Marketing and Communications, 406 Koren Building, 600 Forbes Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15282, Tel: 412.396.6050, Fax: 412.396.5779, Email: [email protected] 2 DUQUESNE UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE Spring '19 PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE Thoughts from the President n my role as president, I’ve tried to emphasize the importance of listening to differing views carefully and respectfully. Open-mindedness is a trait that Ihas always made our country strong, innovative and committed to justice.