Book Review Exploring the Origins of America’s ‘Adversarial’ Legal Culture by Edward A. Purcell, Jr. on July 13, 2017 Introduction Amalia D. Kessler’s Inventing American Exceptionalism is a tour de force of historical imagination, analysis, and synthesis. Asking fresh questions that open new vistas of understanding, her book illustrates some of the complex ways that social factors shape legal thinking on matters ranging from arcane procedural technicalities to fundamental institutional assumptions. Changing social and… Volume 70 (2017-2018)
Book Review The Lawyer/Judge as Republican Hero by Mark Tushnet on July 13, 2017 Introduction Inventing American Exceptionalism tells a two-sided story. On one side is the replacement of the distinctive inquisitorial processes of equity courts with the adversarial ones of common-law courts. The equity courts relied heavily on taking testimony in writing and in secret, freezing the record so that parties could not shape their evidence in light… Volume 70 (2017-2018)
Book Review Contextualizing Inventing American Exceptionalism by Richard White on July 13, 2017 Amalia Kessler’s Inventing American Exceptionalism: The Origins of American Adversarial Legal Culture, 1800-1877 is a stunning legal history that is even richer than the author may have intended. I would not have thought that an analysis of the oral adversarial tradition in American law could provide the larger insights that her book does. This is… Volume 70 (2017-2018)
Book Review Introduction Book Review Symposium on Inventing American Exceptionalism by Bernadette Meyler on July 13, 2017 How, when, and why did Americans become convinced both that our system of civil justice is adversarial through and through and that adversarialism is normatively desirable? Professor Amalia Kessler’s highly engaging and dauntingly erudite new book, Inventing American Exceptionalism: The Origins of American Adversarial Legal Culture, 1800-1877, locates the answer to these questions in a… Volume 70 (2017-2018)