Law from a Cultural Perspective: course description
The devastating critical attack launched against legal formalism by the American Legal Realists in the 1920s created a severe crisis in the law. The claim was made that non-formalistic law is indeterminate and uncertain. We shall discuss the attempt of Karl Llewellyn, the intellectual leader of the Realists, to address this crisis by developing a rudimentary perception of the law of the courts as a cultural system and by claiming that as a culture, this law restrains the jurists socialized in it and creates uniformity of thought and conduct among them. This discussion will be followed by James Boyd White's perception of the law of the courts as "constitutive rhetoric", i.e., as a medium for communal normative buildung in which society's constituting values are clarified and adopted.