Law & Humanities Blog |
Telling Stories About the Founders Posted: 04 Nov 2010 08:20 AM PDT Tom Donnelly, Harvard Law School, has published Our Forgotten Founders: Reconstruction, Public Education, and Constitutional Heroism, at 58 Cleveland State Law Review 115 (2010). Here is the abstract. This Article examines a set of constitutional stories that has not been the subject of focused study by legal scholars — the stories we tell our schoolchildren about the Founding and Reconstruction. These stories offer new clues about the background assumptions that elite lawyers, political leaders, and the wider public bring to bear when they consider the meaning of the Constitution. Since the early twentieth century, our leading high school textbooks have tended to praise the Founding generation and canonize certain Founding Fathers, while, at the same time, largely ignoring Reconstruction's key players and underemphasizing the constitutional revolution these "Forgotten Founders" envisioned (and began to wage). As a result, generations of students have been left with a relatively pristine view of the Founding, while receiving (at best) a "warts-and-all" account of Reconstruction. These disparate accounts (presented for decades in our classrooms) have helped to construct a constitutional culture that reveres the Founding generation, but gives short shrift to their Reconstruction counterparts.Download the article from SSRN at the link. |
Posted: 04 Nov 2010 08:17 AM PDT Robin Paul Malloy, Syracuse University College of Law, has published Adam Smith in the Courts of the United States, at 56 Loyola Law Review 33 (2010). Here is the abstract. Download the article from SSRN at the link. |
You are subscribed to email updates from Law & Humanities Blog To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |