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March 2008

Two Great Creative Minds Are Gone

We've lost two bright lights of the humanities with a legal connection this week. Sir Arthur Clarke, who wrote several great works with human rights themes, including "The Sentinel" and "Rendevous With Rama", died early Wednesday in Sri Lanka, and Paul Scofield, the great English stage actor, who is probably best known to U.S. actors as the star of the film A Man For All Seasons, in which he played Sir Thomas More, died early today. Sir Arthur, born in England, was 90, Mr. Scofield 86.

Here's some analysis of Sir Arthur's work from the New York Times.

From the Media

The Toronto Star compares today's wounded pop stars and celebrati to the heroines of fiction and opera here...In the New Yorker, Jill Lepore considers the differences between fiction and memoir that turns out to be fiction...

All We Need Now Is Someone To Dig a Lock

This story is not a plot for a movie, but as the reporter points out, it sort of has been, and it probably will be again. According to the L.A. District Attorney's office, two local little old ladies have apparently been in the habit of finding lonely old men, befriending them, and getting them to take out insurance policies. And then, yes, you guessed it--these old gentlemen turn up deceased. These little old ladies are now on trial in Los Angeles for killing two of these elderly men, Paul Vados and Kenneth McDavid. They seem to have collected millions over the years, and even though they've been in jail for a year and a half, the money is still rolling in. Read more here. 

If You Missed It...

Jack Balkin, Yale Law School, and Sanford Levinson, University of Texas Law School, published "Law and the Humanities: An Uneasy Relationship," at 18 Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities 155 (2006). Here's the abstract.

In 1930 legal professionals like Judge Learned Hand assumed that law was either part of the humanities or deeply connected to them. By the early twenty-first century, this view no longer seems accurate, despite the fact that legal scholarship has become increasingly interdisciplinary. Instead law has moved closer to the social sciences. This essay discusses why this is so, and why the humanities exist in an uneasy relationship with law and contemporary legal scholarship.

No matter how often the legal academy embraces skills and knowledges external to law, law's professional orientation - and the fact that law is taught in professional schools where most students will not become academics - continually pulls legal scholarship back toward an internal attitude toward law and recourse to traditional legal materials. As a result, law remains far more like a divinity school - devoted to the preservation of the faith - than a department of religion - which studies various religions from multiple perspectives. To the extent that the contemporary disciplines of the humanities view law externally or in ways inconsistent with its professional orientation, they are merely tolerated in law schools rather than central to legal study. More generally, because law is a professional field, it resists colonization by other disciplines that view law externally. Instead, law co-opts the insights of other disciplines and turns them to its own uses.

Ironically, law's thoroughly rhetorical nature, which strongly connects it to the traditions of the humanities, places the contemporary disciplines of the humanities at a relative disadvantage. Law uses rhetoric to establish its authority and to legitimate particular acts of political and legal power. Law's professional orientation pushes legal scholars toward prescriptivism - the demand that scholars cash out their arguments in terms of specific legal interpretations and policy proposals. These tasks push legal scholars toward technocratic forms of discourse that use the social and natural sciences more than the humanities. Whether justly or unjustly, the humanities tend to rise or fall in comparison to other disciplines to the extent that the humanities are able to help lawyers and legal scholars perform these familiar rhetorical tasks of legitimation and prescription.

Download the entire article from SSRN here.

Helpful Websites and Links on Law and the Humanities

Some websites of interest to law and humanities types:

Chicago-Kent's Institute for Law and the Humanities

Melbourne Law School's Institute for International Law and the Humanities

Syracuse University College of Law's Association for the Study of Law, Culture, and the Humanities

Here's a useful page aggregating a number of links.

BBC 1 "The Last Enemy": A New Thriller

Peter Tatchell of The Guardian reviews the BBC1 series The Last Enemy, finding it a cautionary tale.

Like millions of other viewers, I was gripped last night by the latest plot twists in BBC1's thriller series The Last Enemy, which depicts the dystopian future of a complete surveillance society, where everyone is data-based, ID-carded and CCTV-monitored 24/7. It is Big Brother writ-large, with all-pervasive remote sensors, facial recognition software, iris scans, vehicle tracking and eavesdropping.

Through an integrated Total Information Awareness surveillance system, state agents can know almost everything about everyone at the tap of a keyboard: their movements, purchases, emails and phone calls - even their diet, income and house value.

Far-fetched? Only by degrees. What is really scary about The Last Enemy is that it features monitoring technologies that the government, police and intelligence services are already using or considering using.

Read the entire review here.

[Cross posted to The Law and Humanities Blog].