Mourning Freud
Book
Mourning Freud describes and explores the changes in psychoanalytic theories and practices over the...
The Price
Arthur Miller and Jane K. Dominik
Book
This Student Edition of Miller's play The Price is perfect for students of literature and drama and...
Strange Breed: New Canadian Comedy
Book
In late 2014, in a commanding and condemning voice that brooked no argument, a devastating edict was...
The Motive for Metaphor: Brief Essays on Poetry and Psychoanalysis
Book
This book is a small anthology: each chapter a kind of meditation-on poetry and psychoanalysis; on a...
Gender and Hindu Nationalism: Understanding Masculine Hegemony
Book
Hindu nationalism - as a discourse, a set of organisations, and as a movement - has gained a lot of...
A World of Struggle: How Power, Law, and Expertise Shape Global Political Economy
Book
A World of Struggle reveals the role of expert knowledge in our political and economic life. As...
American Founding Son: John Bingham and the Invention of the Fourteenth Amendment
Book
John Bingham was the architect of the rebirth of the United States following the Civil War. A...
Stuart Braithwaite recommended Scenes from the Second Storey by The God Machine in Music (curated)
Andy K (10821 KP) rated The Conspirator (2011) in Movies
Sep 1, 2019
After the assassination of our 16th and very popular president, Abraham Lincoln, the conspirators are shot and/or caught to face an outraged and shocked nation right at the end of the Civil War. Among the accused is Mary Surratt who is on trial for her involvement in aiding, lodging and collaborating with those accused. The entire nation wants justice however they can get it, so her circumstance seems dire without a lot of reprieve.
Enter her reluctant defense attorney who doesn't really want the job of defending a woman everyone wants to see brought to justice. Her trial seems one-sided at best with witnesses changing their stories and the judges not allowing much argument against the accused.
Mary herself seems she has given up hope with little regard for her own life.
Redford manages to build the tension slowly as the evidence becomes increasingly bleak for the defendant and everyone's eyes on the trial's outcome. Stellar performance by the always interesting James McAvoy. He wrestles with his own emotions and the growing prejudice the trial has brought upon him and his family to persevere and provide ample defense for his client.
Conceptual Innovation in Environmental Policy
James Meadowcroft and Daniel J. Fiorino
Book
Concepts are thought categories through which we apprehend the world; they enable, but also...