
Making Legal History
Description
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This book collects ten essays exemplifying and explaining the process of identifying and interpreting archival sources-the foundation of an array of methods of writing American legal history. The essays presented here span the full range of American history from the colonial era to the 1980s.Each historian has either identified a body of sources not previously explored or devised a new method of interrogating sources already known.The result is a kaleidoscopic examination of the historian's task and of the research methods and interpretative strategies that characterize the rich, complex field of American constitutional and legal history.
Reviews / Votes
Making Legal History is not just a tribute to one of the most productive and creative legal historians in the United States, but a fundamental contribution to our understanding of this countrys legal history. These fine essays cover a wide chronological and topic range, and provide the reader with an understanding of just how far we have come in understanding the role of law in American society under Bill Nelsons intellectual influence. The book is a fitting tribute to a great scholar, and a boon to students of our legal past. - Stanley N. Katz,Princeton University These essays epitomize the deep and broad impact that William Nelson has had on the writing of American legal history. In them we see his passion for archival research and his creative application of new sources and new ideas. Nelson has not so much transformed a field as shaped an entirely new one and inspired one of the most vibrant intellectual communities in academia today. - David Thomas Konig,Washington University in St. Louis It is, literally, impossible to overstate Bill Nelsons importance to the field of legal history, whether as a result of his prodigious scholarly output, his generous mentorship of young scholars, or his creative institution building. But his influence in all these roles is displayed in this wonderful collection of essays by many of Americas leading legal historians (all former Goliebs who cut their teeth under Bills incomparable tutelage). - Larry Kramer,President, William & Flora Hewlett Foundation Over the past forty years, William Nelson has played a crucial role in the amazing growth of the field of legal history. His significance comes in the first place from his prodigious scholarship. But as important have been the institutions he has founded and the young scholars he has nurtured. He has been and continues to be a model of the generous and creative senior scholar. The Golieb Fellowship at NYU School of Law, an institution he has long led, has offered a home to two generations of the best young legal historians, as they made transitions into distinguished careers. In the pages of Making Legal History, one finds a wonderful offering of some of their best work. - Hendrik Hartog,Princeton University The collection is determinedly eclectic. This is especially evident in the temporal range covered by the essays, from the colonial era through the Civil War up to the Reagan era. [] The eclecticism may also reflect an intellectual generosity: Whatever the sources a scholar uses, follow them where they lead. As the editors put it, & the essays exemplify less a & school of legal or constitutional history than a shared sense of scholarly purpose. (The Journal of American History)More details
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Persons
R. B. Bernstein is Distinguished Adjunct Professor of Law at New York Law School and Adjunct Professor of Political Science in the Skadden, Arps Honors Program in Legal Studies at the City College of New York. He has written, edited, or co-edited over 20 books in the fields of American constitutional and legal history, including the prize-winning The Founding Fathers Reconsidered and Thomas Jefferson.
Content
- Cover
- Contents
- Foreword: Making Legal History
- Introduction: Making Legal Historians
- I. CIVIL WARS AND LEGAL RIGHTS
- 1. The Landscape of Faith: Religious Property and Confiscation in the Early Republic
- 2. "It cant be cald stealin'": Customary Law among Civil War Soldiers
- 3. Debating the Fourteenth Amendment: The Promise and Perils of Using Congressional Sources
- II. LAW AND SOCIAL REGULATION
- 4. Was the Warning of Strangers Unique to Colonial New England?
- 5. Ambiguities of Free Labor Revisited: The Convict Labor Question in Progressive-Era New York
- 6. The Long, Broad, and Deep Civil Rights Movement: The Lessons of a Master Scholar and Teacher
- 7. Counting as a Tool of Legal History
- III. COURTS, JUDGES, AND LITIGATORS
- 8. A Mania for Accumulation: The Plea of Moral Insanity in Gilded Age Will Contests
- 9. The Political Economy of Pain
- 10. An Unexpected Antagonist: Courts, Deregulation, and Conservative Judicial Ideology, 1980-94
- Bibliography of the Scholarship of William E. Nelson, 1963-2012
- Acknowledgments
- About the Contributors
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- Y
- Z
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