Listing Details
| ID: | 1963 | |
| Title: | Legal History Blog | |
| URL: | http://legalhistoryblog.blogspot.com/ | |
| Category: | Society: History | |
| Description: | Covering scholarship, news and new ideas in legal history. | |
| G. Edward White's Law in American History: Volume 1 - 2012-02-08 07:00:00 | ||
Law in American History: Volume One by G. Edward (Ted) White has been published by Oxford University Press. The publisher's description of the book follows. Ted will answer our questions about his new book--the first in a three-volume series--and his body of work when he joins us in a series of guest blogger question and answer sessions next month. If you have questions for Ted,emailthem to me. ![]() In the first of the three volumes of his projected comprehensive narrative history of the role of law in America from the colonial years through the twentieth century, G. Edward White takes up the central themes of American legal history from the earliest European settlements through the Civil War. White incorporates recent scholarship in anthropology, ethnography, and economic, political, intellectual and legal history to produce a narrative that is both revisionist and accessible, taking up the familiar topics of race, gender, slavery, and the treatment of native Americans from fresh perspectives. Along the way he provides a compelling case for why law can be seen as the key to understanding the development of American life as we know it. Law in American History, Volume 1 will be an essential text for both students of law and general readers. | ||
| CFP: Australia New Zealand Law&History Society - 2012-02-08 04:00:00 | ||
| [Here's a call for papers for what appears to be a particularly well-crafted annual meeting of Antipodean legal historians, to be held at theUniversity of Technology, Sydney(UTS). The organizers tell me that they are keen to have "many of our North American colleagues" attend. Hereis the link to the conference website;herea link to another conference at UTS, on the "historical connections" between the legal profession and defense forces;herea link to yet another, on feminism and the law that will include "revisiting the past."] The 31st Annual Conference of theAustralia New Zealand Law and History Societywill be held at the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS), 10-12 December 2012. UTS is the most centrally located law school in Sydney, situated next to Central Station, on the edge of China Town, three minutes by monorail from Sydney’s central shopping district and a short trip to the harbour by direct train or bus. The conference theme is “Receiving Laws/Giving Laws”. It is orientated towards the movement, transmission and transformation of laws and their histories – across Empire, through time, in and between genres and disciplines. The receiving and giving of laws could be addressed in a broad range of ways. How do laws and histories translocate? By what means (doctrinal, processual, cultural) are laws transmitted and received in new places? What transformations happen as a result of this movement? Whose histories, cultures and laws appear and disappear through these transformations? What kinds of interventions can bring about ways of transforming, perceiving and transmitting the law and its histories/cultures? The keynote speaker is Professor Philip Girard, University Research Professor and Professor of Law, History& Canadian Studies, Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University. There will also be a plenary panel in which three scholars will address the theme of the conference, each through a different genre of legal history: Professor Anne Orford, Melbourne Law School; Dr Katherine Biber, School of Law, UTS; Dr Damen Ward, Crown Law Office, Wellington. The organising committee would welcome interest from historians from any jurisdiction. The call for papers will be open until late June. Inquiries or paper proposals - including a title, brief abstract and brief biography - should be sent to shaunnagh.dorsett@uts.edu.au | ||
| Craine on Common Law and Common Folk in Early America - 2012-02-08 00:30:00 | ||
| Elaine Forman Craine'sWitches, Wife Beaters, and Whores: Common Law and Common Folk in Early America(Cornell Press) is the subject of a recentissueof Rorotoko.* The book, which Craine (Fordham University) classifies as "microhistory," is composed of "six stories about early Americans and how brushes with the law affected everyday life." Here's Craine on the book "in a nutshell": The chapters range geographically from New England to New Amsterdam and from Maryland to Bermuda. Men and women, free and enslaved, humans and spirits rub elbows throughout the pages as the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries collide with the early nineteenth. Although social issues dominate the story lines, sex and money are integral to the narratives.Taking a "wide angle" view, Craine writes: What . . . ties the chapters together and makes a coherent narrative of six disparate stories is the widespread knowledge of and reliance on legal principles that had stood the test of time in the Dutch and Anglo-American worlds. In all of the chapters, the actors display an amazing grasp of law and an astonishing comprehension of their “rights.”And the takeaway: Those debtors, tenants, and servants played as much of a part in the creation of a legal culture as did the legislators who wrote the laws. By obeying such laws, common folk legitimized the authority of those above them. By circumventing the system and seeking justice or punishment through private negotiations, common folk created common law.Read onhere. *As regular readers can probably tell, I love the Rorotoko format because it encourages authors to consider their books from different angles and to explain themselves in jargon-free prose. For historians and consumers of history, the format is particularly useful: it allows authors to talk about "pay off" and process in a way that might be inappropriate for the book itself, but is nonetheless fascinating for readers. Viva, Rorotoko! | ||

