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Michael Brock
Michael Brock
from Wikipedia

Michael George Brock CBE FRSL FRHistS (9 March 1920 – 30 April 2014) was a British historian who was associated with several Oxford colleges during his academic career.[1][2] He was Warden of Nuffield College, Oxford, from 1978 to 1988.

Key Information

Youth and education

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Michael Brock was born in Bromley, Kent, England. His parents were Sir Laurence Brock, a civil servant for the British government, and Margery (née Hodder-Williams). He had an older brother, Patrick, and younger sister, Janet.

Brock was educated at a preparatory school and then, from 1934, Wellington College, Berkshire. In 1938, he joined Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford, to study Classics. In 1940 during World War II, he joined the Middlesex Regiment of the British Army. In 1943, he fell ill in North Africa and returned to Cheshire as an adjutant. He rejoined Corpus Christi College in September 1945, but decided to study modern history instead of Classics, gaining a first class degree in 1948.

Career

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Brock continued after 1948 at Corpus Christi College until 1966, serving as a junior research fellow, senior tutor, proctor, librarian, and dean. He then became Deputy President to Sir Isaiah Berlin at Wolfson College, a new graduate college at Oxford. He held a visiting professor position at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel.

Brock and his wife Eleanor moved to Bologna, Italy, to work collaboratively on editing letters written by H. H. Asquith, a former British Liberal Prime Minister, which were stored in Rome. The letters were written before and during the First World War to the socialite Venetia Stanley (1887–1948), the daughter of Lord Stanley.

On his to England, in 1977 Brock briefly joined the University of Exeter to oversee a merger with St Luke's College of Education. In 1978, he returned to Oxford to become Warden of Nuffield College, succeeding Sir Norman Chester.

Brock edited volumes 6 and 7 of The History of the University of Oxford, published by Oxford University Press. Until 2000, he sat on the Hebdomadal Council, the executive council of Oxford University. In 1988, Brock left Nuffield College to become Warden of St George's House at Windsor Castle for five years.

Honours

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In 1981, Brock was appointed a CBE. In 1983 he became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He was also a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

His former college, Corpus Christi College, established the Michael Brock Junior Research Fellowship in his honour.[3]

Selected books

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  • Brock, Michael (1973). The Great Reform Act. HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 978-0091159115.
  • Brock, Michael; Brock, Eleanor, eds. (1982). H. H. Asquith: Letters to Venetia Stanley. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0192122001.
  • Brock, Michael G.; Curthoys, Mark C., eds. (1997). Nineteenth Century Oxford, Part 1. The History of the University of Oxford. Vol. VI. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0199510160.
  • Brock, Michael G.; Curthoys, Mark C., eds. (2000). Nineteenth Century Oxford, Part 2. The History of the University of Oxford. Vol. VII. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0199510177.
  • Brock, Michael; Brock, Eleanor, eds. (2014). Margot Asquith's Great War Diary 1914–1916: The View from Downing Street. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198229773.

Personal life

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Michael Brock married Eleanor Morrison on 28 July 1949 in Dufftown, Scotland. They lived in Merton Street, central Oxford, and their first child, George, was born in 1951. The couple moved to Linton Road, North Oxford, in 1952. Their second child, David, was born in 1955, and their third child, Paul, was born in 1959.

In 2014, Michael Brock died in Oxford.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Michael Brock'' is a fictional American lawyer known for his moral awakening and transformation from a wealthy corporate attorney to a dedicated advocate for the homeless in John Grisham's 1998 legal thriller novel ''The Street Lawyer''. He begins as an ambitious antitrust associate at the elite Washington, D.C. law firm Drake & Sweeney, fully immersed in a high-earning, fast-track career with little regard for social issues. A hostage crisis at the firm, initiated by a homeless man, profoundly disrupts his life and leads him to uncover unethical actions by his firm that contributed to tragic consequences for homeless families. Shaken by these revelations, Brock dramatically abandons his lucrative position, steals a confidential file exposing the wrongdoing, and joins the 14th Street Legal Clinic to provide legal aid to the underprivileged as a "street lawyer." This shift involves significant personal sacrifices, including the end of his marriage to his wife Claire and a complete change in lifestyle as he commits himself to addressing systemic injustices faced by the homeless population in urban America. Through his journey, Brock becomes a symbol of conscience-driven change within the legal profession, confronting corporate greed and advocating for pro bono work on behalf of society's most vulnerable. The character's arc and the novel's exploration of class disparity and legal ethics have made Michael Brock a recognizable figure in Grisham's body of work, though critical reception has noted the rapid and sometimes contrived nature of his conversion from avarice to virtue.

Early life

As a fictional character in John Grisham's 1998 novel ''The Street Lawyer'', Michael Brock's early life, birth date, birthplace, and family background are not detailed in the book. The narrative begins with Brock as an ambitious antitrust associate in his early thirties at the elite Washington, D.C. law firm Drake & Sweeney.

Career

Michael Brock starts his career as an ambitious antitrust associate at the elite Washington, D.C. law firm Drake & Sweeney, where he is on a high-earning, fast-track path with a focus on corporate law. A pivotal hostage crisis at the firm, led by a homeless man named DeVon Hardy, exposes unethical actions by Drake & Sweeney involving the forced eviction of homeless families from a condemned building, leading to tragic consequences including deaths from exposure. Shaken by these revelations and his own indirect involvement, Brock undergoes a profound moral transformation. He abandons his lucrative position, steals a confidential file documenting the firm's wrongdoing, and leaves to join the 14th Street Legal Clinic, a nonprofit providing free legal services to the homeless and underprivileged in Washington, D.C. In this new role as a "street lawyer," he dedicates himself to pro bono work addressing systemic injustices faced by the homeless, marking a complete shift from corporate law to advocacy for society's most vulnerable. This career change involves significant personal sacrifices, including the dissolution of his marriage to Claire and a drastic reduction in his standard of living. Michael Brock is a fictional character and does not have a personal acting career or filmography. No feature film or television series adaptations of John Grisham's novel ''The Street Lawyer'' were produced. A television pilot was filmed in 2003 by Touchstone Television, but it was not picked up for a full series. In that unsold pilot, the character Michael Brock was portrayed by actor Eddie Cibrian. The filmography credits listed in earlier versions of this section (e.g., roles in ''Jennifer's Body'', ''Eureka'', etc.) belong to a different individual, a real actor also named Michael Brock, and do not relate to the fictional character.

Personal life

Michael Brock is a fictional character, and details of his personal life are limited to those depicted in John Grisham's 1998 novel ''The Street Lawyer''. Brock is married to Claire, a physician, at the start of the novel. They enjoy a comfortable, affluent lifestyle tied to his high-earning career at Drake & Sweeney. As Brock experiences his moral awakening and abandons corporate law to work for the underprivileged at the 14th Street Legal Clinic, his marriage deteriorates. Claire does not support his drastic career change and lifestyle shift, leading to their separation and eventual divorce. No children are mentioned in the novel. Brock's commitment to pro bono work for the homeless results in significant personal sacrifices, including the loss of his marriage and adoption of a much simpler way of life.
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