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In Between and Across acknowledges the boundaries that have separated different modes of historical inquiry, but views law as a way of talking across them. It recognizes that legal history allows scholars to talk across many boundaries, such as those between markets and politics, between identity and state power, as well as between national borders and the flows of people, capital and ideas around the world.
List of contents
- Introduction: Rewriting the Boundaries of Legal History, Kenneth W. Mack and Jacob Katz Cogan
- Part I: The Political Economy of Time
- 1. Views from Rathole Mountain: A Lawscape Journey through Old Virginia, Matthew Axtell
- 2. The Rise of Retail Stockholder Litigation and the Creation of the Plaintiff's Bar in American Business Law, 1930-1950, Donna Dennis
- 3. Private Law, Public Welfare, Marital Ideals, and The Gender Binary . . . or, What I Learned at the Socio-Legal Revolution, Felicia Kornbluh
- 4. Power of the Purse: How "the Philanthropic North" Has Helped Determine Which Individuals, Groups, and Ideas in the Black Freedom Struggle Will Thrive Nationally, Maribel Morey
- 5. "Kindred to Treason": Conspiracy Laws in the United States, Sarah Seo
- Part II: Law, Space, and Place in History
- 6. The Case as Episode: Murder and Migration in Colonial Australia, Catherine L. Evans
- 7. The Chain and the Rope: Illuminating Constitutional Traditions, Maeve Glass
- 8. South Asians at the Inns of Court: Empire, Expulsion, and Redemption circa 1900, Mitra Sharafi
- Part III: Rethinking Method: Law and Everything Else
- 9. "Our Experiences Make Us Who We Are": Lessons from Thomas Ruffin and Dirk Hartog, Jessica K. Lowe
- 10. Debtor Constitutionalism, Farah Peterson
- 11. Roosters and Resistance, Christina D. Ponsa-Kraus
- 12. Law, History, and the Interwar ACLU's Jewish Lawyers, Laura Weinrib
About the author
Kenneth W. Mack is the inaugural Lawrence D. Biele Professor of Law and Affiliate Professor of History at Harvard University. He is also the co-faculty leader of the Harvard Law School Program on Law and History. He has taught at Harvard, Stanford, Georgetown Universities, and the University of Hawai'i. Professor Mack has also served as Senior Visiting Scholar at the Centre for History and Economics, University of Cambridge. In 2020, he received the Harvard Law School Student Government Teaching and Advising Award. In 2016, President Obama appointed him to the Permanent Committee for the Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise.
Jacob Katz Cogan is the Judge Joseph P. Kinneary Professor of Law at the College of Law and an Affiliate Faculty Member of the Department of History at the University of Cincinnati. Immediately before joining the College of Law, he served as an attorney-adviser in the Office of the Legal Adviser at the U.S. Department of State. Previously, he was a fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. He has also held visiting appointments at Vanderbilt University Law School and the University of Chicago Law School.
Summary
The boundaries between the history of law and the history of everything else are quite blurry nowadays. Whether one is asking questions about the origins of the carceral state, the relationship between slavery and capitalism, the history of migration flows and empires, the longer story of human rights, the building of the straight state, the role of religion in public life, or many others, there is a shared belief that law and its history matters. In fact, legal historians began to focus on the blurring of boundaries such as those between markets and politics, between identity and state power, as well as between national borders and the flows of people, capital and ideas around the world.
Legal history, broadly conceived, seems to mark much of the most exciting work that is redrawing the boundaries of historical scholarship in many areas of study. In Between and Across: Legal History without Boundaries gathers some of the newest and freshest work by both younger and established scholars who are carrying forward that project and extending it into new areas of historical inquiry. It captures the best of the new and innovative tools and questions that have made law a central plane of inquiry, charts novel directions for the field, and poses broader questions concerning the past, present, and future.
Crossing a wide variety of geographic areas (from British-ruled Australia to colonial India and Malaysia, to the United States), the authors sketch new boundaries for the field to cross - boundaries of time, geography, and method - and claim that legal history provides the language to talk across national borders.