John Henry Schlegel recovers a largely ignored aspect of American Legal Realism, a movement in legal thought in the 1920s and 1930s that sought to bring the mod
For more than one hundred years, Harvard's use of the case method of appellate opinions dominated legal education. Deploring the attempt to reduce law to an aut
This is the first of two volumes announcing the emergence of the new legal realism as a field of study. At a time when the legal academy is turning to social sc
United States historians have long regarded the U.S. Civil War and its Reconstruction as a second American revolution. Literary scholars, however, have yet to s
This book proposes a rather novel legal-philosophical approach to understanding the intersection between law and morality. It does so by analyzing the condition