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Overview

For four decades, John Phillip Reid has been one of the most productive and challenging practitioners of American legal and constitutional history. Writing on subjects as diverse as the law of the Cherokee, legal culture on the Overland trail, and the legal and constitutional history of the American Revolution, Reid has illuminated the many ways in which law has been a central cultural value.
Law as Culture and Culture as Law not only honors Professor Reid's decades of scholarship and teaching—it presents a spectrum of historical inquiries developing and engaging Reid's insights and methodological approaches to legal and constitutional history. The essays gathered in this volume span nearly three centuries and two continents, ranging from the agonizing struggles over law, religion, and governance in late seventeenth-century Ireland to the legal and constitutional regimes of governmental regulation in twentieth-century New York.
Law as Culture and Culture as Law is a tribute to John Philip Reid and the best evidence of his profound influence on the study and writing of legal history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780945612742
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 05/01/2000
Pages: 488
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 9.22(h) x 1.67(d)

About the Author

Hendrik Hartog is Class of 1921 Bicentennial Professor of the History of American Law and Liberty at Princeton University.
William E. Nelson is Joel S. and Anne B. Ehrenkranz Professor of Law at New York University School of Law.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Legal History's Pathfinder: The Quest of John Phillip Reid Chapter 3 In a Defiant Stance Chapter 4 John Phillip Reid and the Reinterpretation of the American Revolution Chapter 5 Leadership in Colonial and Revolutionary America Chapter 6 The Irish Articles of Religion and the Fall of the Stuart Monarchies Chapter 7 Underreported and Underrrated: The Court of Common Pleas in the Eighteenth Century Chapter 8 The English High Judiciary and the Politics of the Habeas Corpus Bill of 1758 Chapter 9 A Constitutional Middle-Ground Between Revision and Revolution: A Reevaluation of the Nullification Crisis and the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions through the Lens of Popular Sovereignty Chapter 10 Law and Regulation in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Chapter 11 An Inversion Layer in Western Legal History: Air Pollution in Butte, Montana Chapter 12 Wives as Favorites Chapter 13 Government Power as a Tool for Redistributing Wealth in Twentieth-Century New York Chapter 14 From a Reidian Perspective Chapter 15 The Writings of John Phillip Reid, 1959-2000 Chapter 16 List of Contributors Chapter 17 Index
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