But with the death of Julian we have something different. To all intents and purposes we can say that paganism died as a credible political and social force in the last days of June 363.
History
Julian The Apostate
by Adrian Murdoch
June 23rd, 2008
American Creation: Triumphs and Tragedies at the Founding of the Republic by Joseph J. Ellis
by Brett F. Woods
June 23rd, 2008
Over the preceding two centuries, Ellis notes, a number of English, Scottish, and French thinkers had generated a large body of political knowledge that undermined the medieval worldview about government, society, and even human nature itself. Further, that the American people were the beneficiaries of this accumulated wisdom – “it had yet to be called the Enlightenment,” Ellis reminds us – which, although it had its origins in Europe, was now destined to enjoy its fullest implementation in America…
Nancy Love and the WASP Ferry Pilots of World War II by Sarah Byrn Rickman
by Elinor Teele
May 27th, 2008
They were also a PR dream. Initially working for her future husband, Robert Love, the young and pretty Nancy Harkness was hired to demonstrate and sell airplanes. Predicted to replace the family car, the private plane was seen as the wave of the future. If women could fly it, the perception was, anybody could. What Love thought of all of this malarkey, the cheesecake photographs and press coverage, is hard to determine.
Curses on You, White Men!
by George Franklin Feldman
May 12th, 2008
The inhumane acts committed by both sides in this war equal the most heinous crimes of history. The hate was uncontrollable. The Indians sought revenge and a return to their way of life before colonization, and the New Englanders felt they had God on their side. The renowned Puritan preacher and scholar Cotton Mather asserted that “. . . the Evident Hand of Heaven appearing on the Side of a people whose Hope and Help was alone in the Almighty Lord of Hosts, Extinguished whole Nations of Savages.”
Notes from Italy: A Homer of the Dolomites
by Peter Bridges
April 28th, 2008
Some say that the story of the Kingdom of Fanes is an epic that goes back to the Bronze Age in the Dolomites. How could such a story come down to us? No one in those parts knew writing, three thousand years ago or more. We don’t even know what languages people spoke then in the Dolomites. And what kind of kingdom could that have been?
God’s Crucible by David Levering Lewis
by Ed Voves
April 23rd, 2008
For English-speaking peoples, 1066 and 1776 still evoke powerful recollections of liberty lost and freedom won. For most people in the West, however, 711 hardly strikes a note of any significance. But it should, for that was the year when a small force of Muslim Arabs and Berbers from Morocco crossed over from North Africa to Spain. Islam reached Europe in 711 and the world has never been the same.
The Naming of America by John W. Hessler
by Elinor Teele
April 9th, 2008
But as we travel further and further from established trade routes, things become hazier. The Caspian Sea is a blob, Madagascar has acquired an odd right arm, and India, well, India sprawls across the east, stretched and mutated into an obese mermaid’s tail. Now and again familiar names pop out – Java, Cathay – amidst imaginary islands and an eastern ocean scattered with what looks like the flotsam of a broken continent.
Fortune’s a River by Barry Gough
by John Holt
March 5th, 2008
By the closing years of the 18th century the stage was set for a major international confrontation over the Pacific Northwest Coast. Imperial Russia controlled the untamed Alaskan wilderness, Spain was expanding its holdings north from Mexico, Captain James Cook had claimed Northwest America for Great Britain and Captain Robert Gray had discovered the Columbia River, the historical basis for the United States’ claim to the river and the extensive watershed that extends eastward far into Montana.
American-Made by Nick Taylor
by Elinor Teele
March 3rd, 2008
Meanwhile, walls of buildings were rising, mud roads were being paved, library books were being delivered on horseback, archaeological digs were being excavated, and Orson Welles was directing an all-black version of Macbeth set in the Haitian jungle. Along with the carpenters and secretaries, painters, sculptors, writers, and actors had also joined the ranks, though with some confusion on how one measured an artist’s full working week. The WPA was feeding a need, both for the individual and the community.
Erotic Art of Ancient Pompeii
by Judith Harris
February 14th, 2008
A favourite theme which recurred again and again in wall paintings was the satyr creeping up behind a nymph to catch her by surprise. In at least one case the nymph, her veil ripped away, turns out to be a hermaphrodite, to the satyr’s theatrical dismay, and the observer’s amusement. Some wall paintings showed homosexual sex and, because African motifs were popular, another depicted picnicking pygmies enjoying a group orgy under a tent.
Notes From Italy: Villains, Romance, and Views
by Peter Bridges
February 7th, 2008
Filettino was not always a happy place, in history or in fiction. In the time of the Caesars the people here were Aequi, an Italic tribe of rough herders whom the Romans subdued with difficulty. For many centuries, probably millennia, the Aequi practiced transhumance, leading their herds over the Serra in late autumn to spend the winter in pastures in the Liri valley far below, and returning to the uplands for summer.
Battle for Falluja: Photos from Whiskey Tango Foxtrot
by Ashley Gilbertson
January 28th, 2008
The captured fighter claimed to be a student who had gotten stuck in Falluja. A Marine responded, “Yeah, right, University of Jihad, motherfucker.”
Comrade J by Pete Earley
by Jascha Kessler
January 24th, 2008
It was the goings-on, the kleptocracy that emerged, the sheer blatant thuggery of Putin’s entourage, the vandalism and looting that commenced after 1989, related by Tretyakov, that finally discouraged him, a professional through and through and a Russian patriot. The principles that led to his flight into the cloaking arms of the CIA and FBI are suggestive: leaving behind all his property and possessions, amounting to about two million dollars, was worth it because in his view Russia was ruined and things had gone beyond any hope of redemption in his lifetime. He wanted his daughter to grow up a free woman.
Liberal Fascism? Jonah Goldberg Explains
by Paul Comstock
January 8th, 2008
“If I had to pick a single overall theme in the book, I would say it’s to rectify the misunderstanding of what fascism is and to highlight the deep historical, ideological and emotional ties between progressivism (now called liberalism) and fascism.”
The Great Upheaval by Jay Winik
by Brett F. Woods
January 7th, 2008
In twelve short years – from 1788 to 1800 – the world changed, with the late eighteenth century emerging as one of the most momentous, if restless, eras in human history. In Russia, a great dynasty would be toppled; in France, revolution and the guillotine would hold sway; and, in America, the nascent democracy would enter the most critical period of its short existence.

Latest CLR Blog Entries
The Fourth Wall: A Film and Television Blog
Sherlock Recap: ‘The Reichenbach Fall’
When You See Sparks: A CLR Music Blog
Album Review: Iggy Pop’s Après
After Image: Art, Architecture and Design
The Forgotten Sculpture of John B. Flannagan
Alone Together: A CLR Theater Blog
Less Than Kind by Terence Rattigan: Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford, England.
Dance Vine
Smuin Ballet and Diablo Ballet: Two Praiseworthy Bay Area Dance Companies
The Dialogue Tree: A Video Game Blog
Overachievers: In Pursuit Of 1000G
CLR's most popular articles
- The Killing Recap: Openings (Season 2, Episode 6) (4,421 views)
- The Massive Effect a Boss Makes (3,752 views)
- Kick-Ass and the Hit-Girl debacle (2,682 views)
- The Killing Recap: Keylela (Season 2, Episode 7) (2,495 views)
- House Recap: ‘The C-Word’ (Season 8, Episode 19) (2,300 views)
- Photo Essay: North Korean Propaganda Posters (2,243 views)
- House Recap: ‘Holding On’ (Season 8, Episode 21) (2,188 views)
- House Recap: ‘Post Mortem’ (Season 8, Episode 20) (2,166 views)
- Video Game Review: Mass Effect 3 (2,120 views)
- Sherlock Recap: 'A Scandal in Belgravia' (1,898 views)
- Photo Essay: North Korean Propaganda Posters (184,658 views)
- The Help by Kathryn Stockett (171,780 views)
- The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows (75,492 views)
- Kick-Ass and the Hit-Girl debacle (74,415 views)
- Erotic Art of Ancient Pompeii (56,407 views)
- Video Game Review: Mass Effect 3 (51,057 views)
- Images from How To Photograph an Atomic Bomb (45,492 views)
- Frida Kahlo at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (44,495 views)
- The Strange World of Quantum Entanglement (37,184 views)
- The Road by Cormac McCarthy (34,712 views)
Get The Latest California Literary Review Updates Delivered Free To Your Inbox!
Powered by FeedBlitz
Recent Comments:
- Sherlock Recap: ‘The Reichenbach Fall’: Shelley notes: Sherlock is the best thing on television since Life On Mars. Thank you, England.
- The Killing Recap: Sayonara, Hiawatha (Season 2, Episode 9): rocky notes: The scene at the school was way too heavy handed and overdone. This filmmaker knows nothing about the use of subtlety....
- The 2012-2013 Television Season: An Overall Look: Louis notes: I like Eli Stone:}
- House Recap: ‘Holding On’ (Season 8, Episode 21): Evilida notes: Boy, did everyone treat Wilson badly in this episode. I expect House to be selfish, but Foreman really pissed me off. Ignoring that...
- House Recap: ‘Holding On’ (Season 8, Episode 21): Ellen notes: Jonathan – It would not surprise me if it was something Hugh Laurie just came up with at the time of filming.
Follow the California Literary Review on Twitter: @calitreview
