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Lust on Trial

Censorship and the Rise of American Obscenity in the Age of Anthony Comstock

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Recent Posts

  • The Confederate Flag in the Capitol and the Future of American Expression
  • Recent Presentation on Art Censorship and Social Media at the York Festival of Ideas
  • Just published: “The Influence of Art Censorship on New York Collectors in the Gilded Age”
  • New article on John Haberle’s ‘A Bachelor’s Drawer’ in the Metropolitan Museum Journal
  • My Fulbright Lecture at the Benjamin Franklin House is Online. What would BF think about Facebook?
  • Praise in the American Historical Review
  • Winner of the Peter C. Rollins Book Prize of the Northeast Popular/American Culture Association
  • Appreciative Review in the Journal of Intellectual Freedom and Privacy
  • First Amendment Salon with Nadine Strossen at Ballard Spahr LLC is Now Live
  • Mary Campbell reviews Lust on Trial in Panorama
  • The Past Present and Future of American Free Speech, at FIT
  • “Richly detailed, deeply researched and lavishly illustrated.” Immoral Rubber: The Times Literary Supplement Review
  • Interview at Notches: (re) marks on the History of Sexuality
  • “An amazing feat of pop-cultural scholarship” The Los Angeles Review of Books
  • Praise at the Gotham Center for New York City History for “provocative, cutting-edge work.”
  • How Comstock Changed Law – Podcast with Lee Rawles for the American Bar Association
  • “Posterity Applies a Disinfectant” Another Smart Take on Lust on Trial @ Inside Higher Ed
  • “Portrait of a Puritanical Knucklehead” Review @ Inside Higher Ed
  • So to Speak PODCAST: A great conversation with Nico Perrino
  • Read the Introduction on Issuu

Miss Bentham’s Body in Art and Law: My lecture at the Barber Art Institute now on Vimeo

George Bellows, Nude, Miss Bentham, 1906, Barber Art Institute

 

 

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Posted on June 16, 2017June 19, 2017Author Amy WerbelCategories UncategorizedTags Censorship, George Bellows, nude in art

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