Confessions of a free speech lawyer : Charlottesville and the politics of hate
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Bibliographic Information
Confessions of a free speech lawyer : Charlottesville and the politics of hate
Cornell University Press, 2020
- : hardcover
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In the personal and frank Confessions of a Free Speech Lawyer, Rodney A. Smolla offers an insider's view on the violent confrontations in Charlottesville during the "summer of hate." Blending memoir, courtroom drama, and a consideration of the unhealed wound of racism in our society, he shines a light on the conflict between the value of free speech and the protection of civil rights.
Smolla has spent his career in the thick of these tempestuous and fraught issues, from acting as lead counsel in a famous Supreme Court decision challenging Virginia's law against burning crosses, to serving as co-counsel in a libel suit brought by a fraternity against Rolling Stone magazine for publishing an article alleging that one of the fraternity's initiation rituals included gang rape. Smolla has also been active as a university leader, serving as dean of three law schools and president of one and railing against hate speech and sexual assault on US campuses.
Well before the tiki torches cast their ominous shadows across the nation, the city of Charlottesville sought to relocate the Unite the Right rally; Smolla was approached to represent the alt-right groups. Though he declined, he came to wonder what his history of advocacy had wrought. Feeling unsettlingly complicit, he joined the Charlottesville Task Force, and he realized that the events that transpired there had meaning and resonance far beyond a singular time and place. Why, he wonders, has one of our foundational rights created a land in which such tragic clashes happen all too frequently?
Table of Contents
1. A Call from the Task Force
2. The Charleston Massacre
3. Becoming Richard Spencer
4. Reverend Edwards
5. The Charlottesville Monuments
6. Blut und Boden
7. Mr. Jefferson's University
8. Kessler v. Bellamy
9. The Monuments Debate
10. Competing Conceptions of Free Speech
11. May Days
12. Cue the Klan-Stage Right
13. The Rise of the Marketplace
14. Cue the Counterprotesters-Stage Left
15. A Rolling Stone Gathers No Facts
16. The Marketplace Doubles Down
17. The Day of the Clan
18. When Speech Advances Civil Rights
19. Duke and the Desciples
20. The Russian Connection
21. A Call to Conscience
22. Preparations
23. The Day to the Cross
24. The Idea of the University
25. Heckler's Veto
26. Channels of Communication
27. Rednecks and Saint Paul
28. The Lawn and the Rotunda
29. Bloodshed
30. Aftermath
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