03997nam 22006135 450 991045634290332120211029022403.00-8147-0515-40-585-02296-810.18574/9780814705155(CKB)111000211309070(EBL)865302(OCoLC)784884417(SSID)ssj0000146211(PQKBManifestationID)11161567(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000146211(PQKBWorkID)10182748(PQKB)11482706(DE-B1597)547818(DE-B1597)9780814705155(MiAaPQ)EBC865302(OCoLC)42854221(EXLCZ)9911100021130907020200623h19981998 fg 0engurnn#---|u||utxtccrThe Empire Strikes Back Outsiders and the Struggle over Legal Education /Arthur D. AustinNew York, NY :New York University Press,[1998]©19981 online resource (236 p.)Critical America ;66Description based upon print version of record.0-8147-0650-9 Front matter --Contents --Acknowledgments --Note to the Reader --1. The Outsiders vs. the Empire --2. The Empire --3. Empire Scholarship: What Are They Protecting? --4. The Greening of Faculty, Students, and Law Review --5. “CLS Is Dead As a Doornail” --6. Critical Race Scholarship --7. Can Voice and Truth Coexist? --8. The Abyss of Legal Scholarship --9. Comments and Conclusions --Bibliography --Index --About the AuthorOnce dismissed as plodding and superfluous, legal scholarship is increasingly challenging the liberal white male establishment that currently dominates legal education and practice. The most significant development since the emergence of the casebook, at the turn of the century, this trend has unleashed a fierce political struggle. At stake is nothing less than the entire enterprise of law and education, and thus a powerful platform from which to shape society. The result, here vividly recounted by Arthur Austin, has been an uncompromising, take-no-prisoners fight for dominance. The challenge comes from Outsiders, a collection of feminists, critical race theorists, and critical legal studies scholars who rely on unconventional methods such as storytelling to give voice to the underrepresented. In the other, demographically larger camp resides the monolithic Empire, consisting of traditionalists who, having developed an effective form of scholarship, now circle the wagons against the outsider heathens. Neither partisan nor objective, Austin is both respectful and critical of each faction. The Empire, he believes, is imperious, closed-minded, and self-perpetuating; the Outsiders are too often paranoid, anti-pragmatic, and overly tolerant of fringe work. Is the new scholarship a vacuous, overpoliticized, soon-to-be-vanquished trend or the harbinger of an important new paradigm? Is reconciliation possible? Anyone with a vested interest in the answer to these questions, and in the future of law, cannot afford to miss Arthur Austin's invaluable volume. Arthur Austin is the Edgar A. Hahn Professor of Jurisprudence at Case Western Reserve University.Critical America SeriesLawStudy and teachingUnited StatesCritical legal studiesUnited StatesSociological jurisprudenceElectronic books.LawStudy and teachingCritical legal studiesSociological jurisprudence340/.071/173Austin Arthur D.authttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut1026031DE-B1597DE-B1597BOOK9910456342903321The Empire Strikes Back2440712UNINA