The editors of Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature, and its contributors too, deserve congratulations for its ten years of most successful life. & a small contribution to this moment of celebration I should like to suggest a particular line of thought about what the reading of literature helps us to see about law
The context provided by an AALS panel on Law and Humanities, organized by Jessica Silbey under the t...
(Excerpt) This book, now available in a 45th-anniversary edition, is a marvel for its breadth and cr...
In the 1979 inaugural issue of the Michigan Law Review’s annual survey of books related to the law, ...
With what hopes and expectations should a lawyer turn to the reading of imaginative literature? To b...
With what hopes and expectations should a lawyer turn to the reading of imaginative literature? To b...
The tenth anniversary of this Journal is an occasion not only for celebrating its remarkable achieve...
The following essay is based on the talk Law and Literature : Examining the Limited Legal Imaginati...
There is a dichotomy in the problem of sufficient interest in and of realization of the sheer import...
This paper is an essay in what I want to call the poetics of the law. I begin with a largely autobio...
Many people, including many lawyers and judges, disparage law reviews and the books that sometimes r...
The context provided by an AALS panel on Law and Humanities, organized by Jessica Silbey under the t...
In this paper I wish to look at the relation between law and literature from the point of view of th...
The author here examines the ways in which law and literature complement each other; legal settings ...
This paper was offered as the keynote address at a conference in April of 2004 at the Cardozo Law Sc...
Weisberg traces Judge Cardozo\u27s advice about legal writing to the famous 1925 essay LAW AND LITER...
The context provided by an AALS panel on Law and Humanities, organized by Jessica Silbey under the t...
(Excerpt) This book, now available in a 45th-anniversary edition, is a marvel for its breadth and cr...
In the 1979 inaugural issue of the Michigan Law Review’s annual survey of books related to the law, ...
With what hopes and expectations should a lawyer turn to the reading of imaginative literature? To b...
With what hopes and expectations should a lawyer turn to the reading of imaginative literature? To b...
The tenth anniversary of this Journal is an occasion not only for celebrating its remarkable achieve...
The following essay is based on the talk Law and Literature : Examining the Limited Legal Imaginati...
There is a dichotomy in the problem of sufficient interest in and of realization of the sheer import...
This paper is an essay in what I want to call the poetics of the law. I begin with a largely autobio...
Many people, including many lawyers and judges, disparage law reviews and the books that sometimes r...
The context provided by an AALS panel on Law and Humanities, organized by Jessica Silbey under the t...
In this paper I wish to look at the relation between law and literature from the point of view of th...
The author here examines the ways in which law and literature complement each other; legal settings ...
This paper was offered as the keynote address at a conference in April of 2004 at the Cardozo Law Sc...
Weisberg traces Judge Cardozo\u27s advice about legal writing to the famous 1925 essay LAW AND LITER...
The context provided by an AALS panel on Law and Humanities, organized by Jessica Silbey under the t...
(Excerpt) This book, now available in a 45th-anniversary edition, is a marvel for its breadth and cr...
In the 1979 inaugural issue of the Michigan Law Review’s annual survey of books related to the law, ...