Law & Humanities Blog |
Posted: 16 Jul 2011 08:18 AM PDT The July 2011 issue of the Texas Bar Journal features an article by Douglas E. Abrams, What Great Writers Can Teach Lawyers And Judges: Wisdom From Plato To Mark Twain To Stephen King (Part I). As Professor Abrams (University of Missouri, Columbia) writes in his article, Like most other close analogies, analogies between literature and legal writing may be imperfect at their edges. "Literature is not the goal of lawyers," wrote Justice Felix Frankfurter nearly 80 years ago, "though they occasionally attain it.""The law," said Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes even earlier, "is not the place for the artist or the poet."[Footnotes omitted]. |
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