This essay examines the contributions of Lisa Siraganian’s Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate Persons (2021) to our understanding of the historical development and philosophical underpinning of United States corporate law as well as to broader studies of law and literature. The first part of the essay considers Siraganian’s analysis of problems related to corporate agency, intention, and responsibility. The second part considers the book’s implications for other types of collective social entities. In particular, the essay reads Ida Fink’s The Table (1970) and Charles Reznikoff’s Holocaust (1975) through the lens of Siraganian’s study, examining their treatment of the challenges posed by the collective nature of the Nazi genocide. The e...
An essay responding to four essays written about my book Corporations Are People Too
One of the most intriguing debates in corporate law is over the personhood of corporations. For year...
The case of Medical Committee for Human Rights v. SEC raised some interesting questions. Why did the...
This essay examines the contributions of Lisa Siraganian\u27s Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate...
This essay situates Lisa Siraganian’s important book, Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate Persons...
Lisa Siraganian’s Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate Persons (2020) illuminates modernist invest...
This review essay of Lisa Siraganian’s Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate Persons reflects on th...
This article addresses four threads of analysis that emerged in the forum on my book Modernism and t...
Can we say that corporations are "morally accountable " for their actions in the same sens...
This Article, the first of a multipart project, addresses the nature of corporate personhood, one ar...
This essay provides a genealogy of corporate personhood as it exists currently in US law and places ...
The recent controversy over the billions of dollars authorized by Congress to bail out some of the n...
Recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions in Citizens United (2010) and Hobby Lobby (2014) have brought th...
This book explores how American legal scholarship treats the corporation by providing a history of A...
In this essay Professor Deutsch addresses the question whether the legal system can make modern corp...
An essay responding to four essays written about my book Corporations Are People Too
One of the most intriguing debates in corporate law is over the personhood of corporations. For year...
The case of Medical Committee for Human Rights v. SEC raised some interesting questions. Why did the...
This essay examines the contributions of Lisa Siraganian\u27s Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate...
This essay situates Lisa Siraganian’s important book, Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate Persons...
Lisa Siraganian’s Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate Persons (2020) illuminates modernist invest...
This review essay of Lisa Siraganian’s Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate Persons reflects on th...
This article addresses four threads of analysis that emerged in the forum on my book Modernism and t...
Can we say that corporations are "morally accountable " for their actions in the same sens...
This Article, the first of a multipart project, addresses the nature of corporate personhood, one ar...
This essay provides a genealogy of corporate personhood as it exists currently in US law and places ...
The recent controversy over the billions of dollars authorized by Congress to bail out some of the n...
Recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions in Citizens United (2010) and Hobby Lobby (2014) have brought th...
This book explores how American legal scholarship treats the corporation by providing a history of A...
In this essay Professor Deutsch addresses the question whether the legal system can make modern corp...
An essay responding to four essays written about my book Corporations Are People Too
One of the most intriguing debates in corporate law is over the personhood of corporations. For year...
The case of Medical Committee for Human Rights v. SEC raised some interesting questions. Why did the...