This Forum consists of four Essays which explore and analyze the rhetoric used in the Lochner opinions authored by Justices Peckham, Harlan, and Holmes. These Essays were inspired in part by Judge Richard Posner\u27s Law and Literature: A Misunderstood Relation, and are offered to facilitate interdisciplinary dialogue between legal and rhetoric scholars on the ways legal rhetoric shapes our political and legal institutions
Legal theorists increasingly have come to recognize and study the existence of a constitutional cano...
I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the d...
The process by which we represent our society\u27s will and welfare in the medium of law is an imagi...
This Forum consists of four Essays which explore and analyze the rhetoric used in the Lochner opinio...
Rhetorical scholars have long advocated for the study of legal discourse because of the “centrality ...
This book describes the significance of rhetorical knowledge for law through detailed discussions of...
The tendency in combinations of law and literature has been to reach for similarities and conflation...
Perhaps nowhere in American life is the intersection of language, argumentation, and politics more i...
An open-handed image of rhetoric presents an argument against the closed fist of logic and the “nast...
This project responds to a need for new theoretical tools for understanding law as a site for the in...
This essay offers something different from the usual law review article: an examination of Justice ...
Justice Antonin Scalia (1936–2016) was the single most important figure in the emergence of the “new...
Justice Antonin Scalia (1936–2016) was the single most important figure in the emergence of the “new...
Three questions concerning modern legal thought provide the framework for It\u27s All in the Game: W...
Professor Michael Gerhardt traces the rhetoric employed by national leaders and commentators over th...
Legal theorists increasingly have come to recognize and study the existence of a constitutional cano...
I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the d...
The process by which we represent our society\u27s will and welfare in the medium of law is an imagi...
This Forum consists of four Essays which explore and analyze the rhetoric used in the Lochner opinio...
Rhetorical scholars have long advocated for the study of legal discourse because of the “centrality ...
This book describes the significance of rhetorical knowledge for law through detailed discussions of...
The tendency in combinations of law and literature has been to reach for similarities and conflation...
Perhaps nowhere in American life is the intersection of language, argumentation, and politics more i...
An open-handed image of rhetoric presents an argument against the closed fist of logic and the “nast...
This project responds to a need for new theoretical tools for understanding law as a site for the in...
This essay offers something different from the usual law review article: an examination of Justice ...
Justice Antonin Scalia (1936–2016) was the single most important figure in the emergence of the “new...
Justice Antonin Scalia (1936–2016) was the single most important figure in the emergence of the “new...
Three questions concerning modern legal thought provide the framework for It\u27s All in the Game: W...
Professor Michael Gerhardt traces the rhetoric employed by national leaders and commentators over th...
Legal theorists increasingly have come to recognize and study the existence of a constitutional cano...
I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the d...
The process by which we represent our society\u27s will and welfare in the medium of law is an imagi...