The Business Law and Narrative Symposium, held at Michigan State University on September 10-11, 2009, brought together nationally known legal scholars, and scholars from other disciplines, to discuss whether and how the institution of the corporation was embedded in social narratives, public stories. This introductory essay reviews the responses of these scholars to the thesis of Kuykendall's article, No Imagination: The Marginal Role of Narrative in Corporate Law. The authors conclude with a hope that corporate law might offer a more literary sensibility by which to make our lives in global capitalism more comprehensible
This ConLawNOW submission is an excerpt from a previously published piece. The following abstract is...
In recent years, the publicly held corporation has assumed a central position in both the economic a...
The legal market has changed. Although change creates uncertainty and fear, it also can create oppo...
The Business Law and Narrative Symposium, held at Michigan State University on September 10-11, 2009...
Adolph Berle, the key twentieth-century theorist about the corporation, wrote that business does n...
Why is there such a rush to storytelling? Why has narrative become such an important and recurring t...
This book explores how American legal scholarship treats the corporation by providing a history of A...
The papers collected in this symposium issue were delivered in preliminary form at a conference held...
Introduction for the 1988 Journal of Law Reform Symposium: Issues in Corporate Governance
“The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience,” wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes in 188...
This essay examines the development of corporate law during the time span of the author\u27s career,...
At its core, corporate law, like most law, is a morality play. Its internal structure is not determi...
(Excerpt) The challenges of teaching corporate social responsibility and good corporate citizenship ...
article published in law reviewOnce upon a time, the law and literature movement taught us that stor...
How can you expect me to want to study a subject like corporations which involves nothing more than ...
This ConLawNOW submission is an excerpt from a previously published piece. The following abstract is...
In recent years, the publicly held corporation has assumed a central position in both the economic a...
The legal market has changed. Although change creates uncertainty and fear, it also can create oppo...
The Business Law and Narrative Symposium, held at Michigan State University on September 10-11, 2009...
Adolph Berle, the key twentieth-century theorist about the corporation, wrote that business does n...
Why is there such a rush to storytelling? Why has narrative become such an important and recurring t...
This book explores how American legal scholarship treats the corporation by providing a history of A...
The papers collected in this symposium issue were delivered in preliminary form at a conference held...
Introduction for the 1988 Journal of Law Reform Symposium: Issues in Corporate Governance
“The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience,” wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes in 188...
This essay examines the development of corporate law during the time span of the author\u27s career,...
At its core, corporate law, like most law, is a morality play. Its internal structure is not determi...
(Excerpt) The challenges of teaching corporate social responsibility and good corporate citizenship ...
article published in law reviewOnce upon a time, the law and literature movement taught us that stor...
How can you expect me to want to study a subject like corporations which involves nothing more than ...
This ConLawNOW submission is an excerpt from a previously published piece. The following abstract is...
In recent years, the publicly held corporation has assumed a central position in both the economic a...
The legal market has changed. Although change creates uncertainty and fear, it also can create oppo...