The magic mirror : law in American history
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The magic mirror : law in American history
Oxford University Press, 2009
2nd ed
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Weaving together themes from the history of public, private, and constitutional law, The Magic Mirror: Law in American History, Second Edition, recounts the roles that law-in all its many shapes and forms-has played in American history, from the days of the earliest English settlements in North America to the year 2007. It also provides comprehensive treatment of twentieth-century developments and sets American law and legal institutions in the broad context of social, cultural, economic, and political events. The Magic Mirror begins by discussing the ways that the settlers dealt with one another and with the indigenous populations; it examines municipal ordinances; colonial, state, and federal statutes; administrative agencies; and court decisions. It goes on to relate the ways that property, crime, sale and labor contracts, commercial transactions, accidents, domestic relations, wills, trusts, and corporations were handled by police, attorneys, legislatures, and jurists over the centuries.
The text also pays close attention to the evolution of substantive law categories-including contracts, torts, negotiable instruments, real property, trusts and estates, and civil procedure-and addresses the intellectual evolution of American law, including sociological jurisprudence, legal realism, critical legal studies, Law & Society, Law & Anthropology, and Law & Economics schools of analysis and thought. Featuring extensive updates by new author Peter Karsten, The Magic Mirror is ideal for courses in American Legal History.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Social and Institutional Foundations of Early American Law
- Law, Society, and Economy in Colonial America
- The Law in Revolution and Revolution in the Law
- Law, Politics, and the Rise of the American Legal System
- The Active State and the Mixed Economy: 1789-1880
- Common Law, Jurists, and American Values: Continuity and Change, 1780-1880
- Race and the Nineteenth-Century Law of Domestic Relations
- The Nineteenth-Century Law of Personal Status
- The Dangerous Classes and the Nineteenth-Century Criminal Justice System
- Law, Industrialization, and the Beginnings of the Regulatory State: 1860-1920
- The Professionalization of the Legal Culture: Bench and Bar, 1860-1920
- The Judicial Response to Industrialization: 1860-1920
- Cultural Pluralism, Total War, and the Formation of Modern Legal Culture: 1917-1945
- The Great Depression and the Emergence of Liberal Legal Culture
- Contemporary Law and Society
- The Imperial Judiciary and Contemporary Social and Cultural Change
- Epilogue: More like a River than a Rock
- Notes
- Glossary
- Bibliographical Essay
- Table of Cases
- Index
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