Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes and Legal Culture

What do you call 600 lawyers at the bottom of the sea? Marc Galanter calls it an opportunity to investigate the meanings of a rich and time-honored genre of American humor: lawyer jokes. Lowering the Bar analyzes hundreds of jokes from Mark Twain classics to contemporary anecdotes about Dan Quayle, Johnnie Cochran, and Kenneth Starr. Drawing on representations of law and lawyers in the mass media, political discourse, and public opinion surveys, Galanter finds that the increasing reliance on law has coexisted uneasily with anxiety about the “legalization” of society. Informative and always entertaining, his book explores the tensions between Americans’ deep-seated belief in the law and their ambivalence about lawyers.

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Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes and Legal Culture

What do you call 600 lawyers at the bottom of the sea? Marc Galanter calls it an opportunity to investigate the meanings of a rich and time-honored genre of American humor: lawyer jokes. Lowering the Bar analyzes hundreds of jokes from Mark Twain classics to contemporary anecdotes about Dan Quayle, Johnnie Cochran, and Kenneth Starr. Drawing on representations of law and lawyers in the mass media, political discourse, and public opinion surveys, Galanter finds that the increasing reliance on law has coexisted uneasily with anxiety about the “legalization” of society. Informative and always entertaining, his book explores the tensions between Americans’ deep-seated belief in the law and their ambivalence about lawyers.

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Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes and Legal Culture

Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes and Legal Culture

by Marc Galanter
Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes and Legal Culture

Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes and Legal Culture

by Marc Galanter

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Overview

What do you call 600 lawyers at the bottom of the sea? Marc Galanter calls it an opportunity to investigate the meanings of a rich and time-honored genre of American humor: lawyer jokes. Lowering the Bar analyzes hundreds of jokes from Mark Twain classics to contemporary anecdotes about Dan Quayle, Johnnie Cochran, and Kenneth Starr. Drawing on representations of law and lawyers in the mass media, political discourse, and public opinion surveys, Galanter finds that the increasing reliance on law has coexisted uneasily with anxiety about the “legalization” of society. Informative and always entertaining, his book explores the tensions between Americans’ deep-seated belief in the law and their ambivalence about lawyers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780299213534
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Publication date: 10/10/2006
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 448
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Marc Galanter is the John and Rylla Bosshard Professor Emeritus of Law at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and Centennial Professor in the Department of Law at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Table of Contents

Contents

Tables and Illustrations 000

I. Introduction 000

The Enlargement and Withdrawal of the Legal World 000

Learning from Lawyer Jokes 000

What is a joke? 000

What is a lawyer joke? 000

Lawyer's Jokes vs. Jokes About Lawyers 000

The Lawyer Joke Corpus 000

Recorded Jokes and Oral Transmission 000

"Switching" 000

Print media and the oral tradition 000

Representativeness 000

Tracing changes over time 000

Does the joke corpus tell us about the legal culture? 000

Part One: The Enduring Core and Its Recent Accretions

II. Lies and Strategems: The Corruption of Discourse 000

Lying and Dishonesty 000

Workers in the Mills of Deceit 000

Eloquence, Persuasiveness, Resourcefulness 000

Hot Air: Lawyer Talk as Fakery and Bombast 000

Masters of Stratagem 000

The Lawyer Outsmarted 000

The Ascendency of Lawyer Talk 000

III. The Lawyer as Economic Predator 000

Only the Lawyer Wins 000

Taking it All 000

A Prodigious Predator 000

Fee Simple 000

Throwing the Meter 000

Sexploitation: Predation as Sex/Sex as Predation 000

The Justice Tariff 000

IV. The Devil's Playmates

The Devil's Own 000

Headed for Hell 000

Absent in Heaven 000

A Kingdom of This World 000

V. The Conflict Cluster: Lawyers as Fomenters of Strife 000

Excess and Insufficient Combativeness 000

Promoters of Conflict 000

The Conniving Claimant 000

Litigation Fever 000

The Lawyer as Heroic Champion 000

VI. The Demography of the World of Lawyer Jokes 000

The Hemispheric Prism 000

Women in Combat 000

Jews and Other Outsiders 000

Seniors and Juniors 000

Part Two: The New Territories

VII. Lawyers as Betrayers of Trust 000

Lawyers in a World of Declining Trust 000

The Betrayal Joke Cluster 000

Betrayal as Virtue 000

What Do the Jokes Tell Us? 000

An Excess of Loyalty? 000

VIII. The Lawyer as Morally Deficient 000

A Suspect Profession 000

Looking Out for Number One 000

No Redeeming Social Value 000

"He Just Doesn't Get It" 000

In the Laboratory 000

IX. Lawyers as Objects of Scorn 000

Closing the Circle of Scorn 000

Sounding the Depths 000

Into the Slime 000

The Anal Connection 000

The Uses of Scorn 000

X. "A Good Start!" Death Wish Jokes 000

The Contemporary Onslaught 000

Let's Kill All the Lawyers 000

A Pestilential Affliction 000

The Seventy Percent Legend 000

Explaining the Flourishing of Death Wish Jokes 000

Part Three: The Justice Implosion 000

XI. Enemies of Justice 000

Doing Justice 000

The Lawyer as Enemy of Justice 000

What Does Law Deliver? 000

XII. Only in America? 000

Appendix: Register of Jokes 000

Notes 000

References 000

Index 000

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