Legal critics have long noted that trials are narratives that arbitrate between conflicting stories about a controversial event and that, consequently, the legal process often takes on a larger cultural meaning through the idea of story. But acknowledgment, as such, does not imply an effective analytical understanding of the connection, and it has not led to a perception of the way in which legal stories become cultural narratives. We can only tell the stories we know how to tell, and the degree of our understanding-our appreciation-depends on issues of narrative and genre often present but usually missed in studies of the legal process. Famous trials, trials that capture the imagination of a community, are particularly useful for observing...