Robert Cover\u27s work, on which this conference reflected, indirectly but importantly contributed to this project. Over a decade ago, I devoted a chapter of my scholarly career to his justly celebrated Nomos and Narrative, showing how Cover extracted from Jewish sources an alternative, even if overly wishful, model of Jewish law and used that model to expand the horizons of American legal theory. Cover not only recalled for us modern law\u27s connection to the sacred; he also gave those working in the field of Jewish religious thought a new and rich vocabulary with which to describe the rabbinic legal imagination and reminded us that law and narrative are deeply intertwined. Robert Cover\u27s work figures as well in the specific subject I ...
Bob Cover was not content with the world. In his legal scholarship, this discontent expressed itself...
Through his landmark exploration of obligation as the conceptual touchstone of what he describes as ...
In this Article, we argue that rights play a central role in Jewish law. In Section I, we reconstruc...
Levine takes a look at Robert Cover\u27s 1983 Harvard Law Review article, Nomos and Narrative. Nomos...
Beginning with Professor Robert Cover\u27s Nomos and Narrative, contemporary American legal scholars...
As a teacher, Yale law professor Robert Cover never “dazzled,” “zinged,” nor “entertained”; he just ...
The world is bubbling over with law. As the late Robert Cover tells us in Nomos and Narrative, it sp...
I imagine that when Robert Cover\u27s Nomos and Narrative essay first reached the editors of the Har...
Law in action is a familiar phrase in legal circles that have come to accept that law on the books ...
Law in action is a familiar phrase in legal circles that have come to accept that law on the books ...
My personal study of the Torah and the Talmud as an adult has enhanced my legal scholarship and help...
Levine examines the roles of legislative and judicial bodies, in the context of a discussion of broa...
When scholars write about rabbinic capital punishment, they tend to cite one well-known text from th...
The article discusses various aspects of creativity in early Jewish law, including the fundamental t...
Twenty-one years ago, Robert Cover left an indelible mark on legal scholarship with his epic tale of...
Bob Cover was not content with the world. In his legal scholarship, this discontent expressed itself...
Through his landmark exploration of obligation as the conceptual touchstone of what he describes as ...
In this Article, we argue that rights play a central role in Jewish law. In Section I, we reconstruc...
Levine takes a look at Robert Cover\u27s 1983 Harvard Law Review article, Nomos and Narrative. Nomos...
Beginning with Professor Robert Cover\u27s Nomos and Narrative, contemporary American legal scholars...
As a teacher, Yale law professor Robert Cover never “dazzled,” “zinged,” nor “entertained”; he just ...
The world is bubbling over with law. As the late Robert Cover tells us in Nomos and Narrative, it sp...
I imagine that when Robert Cover\u27s Nomos and Narrative essay first reached the editors of the Har...
Law in action is a familiar phrase in legal circles that have come to accept that law on the books ...
Law in action is a familiar phrase in legal circles that have come to accept that law on the books ...
My personal study of the Torah and the Talmud as an adult has enhanced my legal scholarship and help...
Levine examines the roles of legislative and judicial bodies, in the context of a discussion of broa...
When scholars write about rabbinic capital punishment, they tend to cite one well-known text from th...
The article discusses various aspects of creativity in early Jewish law, including the fundamental t...
Twenty-one years ago, Robert Cover left an indelible mark on legal scholarship with his epic tale of...
Bob Cover was not content with the world. In his legal scholarship, this discontent expressed itself...
Through his landmark exploration of obligation as the conceptual touchstone of what he describes as ...
In this Article, we argue that rights play a central role in Jewish law. In Section I, we reconstruc...