Attend an In-Person History of the Supreme Court course with Historian James M. Masnov!
Learn Constitutional History Every Thursday in April in Corvallis, Oregon!
Interested in learning more about the history of the Supreme Court and American legal/intellectual/constitutional history?
Have you read James M. Masnov’s Rights Reign Supreme: An Intellectual History of Judicial Review and the Supreme Court and would like to discuss it in depth with the author?
Would you like to know more about U.S. History and its influence on our way of life today, but would like to do so with real-time discussion, Q&A, and good faith intellectual debate?
Are you located in the mid-Willamette Valley, or do you plan to be during the month of April?
Register for author/historian, James M. Masnov’s History of the Supreme Court course, which will be held every Thursday in April 2024 at the Corvallis Campus of Linn-Benton Community College.
This four week course (every Thursday morning during the month of April) is part of LBCC’s Community Education program, which means it is aimed at those who are not necessarily current college students, and includes those who are unorthodox thinkers, and those with curious minds who are interested in academic discourse but do not necessarily have the time or the means for full-time study. This entire course, which includes four two-hour classes by historian and published author, James M. Masnov, is only $79.
This History of the Supreme Court course is designed for any and all who are interested in learning more about American history, the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights, the Reconstruction Amendments following the Civil War, the history of the Supreme Court, and the intellectual history and political philosophies that informed the concepts of an independent judiciary, republicanism, and individual rights.
Register for James M. Masnov’s History of the Supreme Court here.
[James M. Masnov is a writer, historian, and lecturer. He has been a contributor at Past Tense, Pure Insights, New Discourses, the Brownstone Institute, Armstrong Journal of History, and the Oregon Encyclopedia. His newest book, Rights Reign Supreme: An Intellectual History of Judicial Review and the Supreme Court, is available here. His first book, History Killers and Other Essays by an Intellectual Historian, is available here.]