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Full-Text Articles in Law
"Reputation, Reputation, Reputation": Fred Rodell, Felix Frankfurter, And The Reproduction Of Hierarchy In The Unlikeliest Of Places, Andrew Yaphe
Andrew Yaphe
If he is remembered at all, Fred Rodell is thought of as a marginal legal realist who spent his time irreverently mocking legal academia and the legal profession. Save for the “marginal” part, this description would be accepted even by Rodell’s admirers. But, as this Article shows, there is more to Rodell than witticisms. Rodell’s humor conceals a radical critique of elite legal education that prefigures the better-known critique put forth decades later by Duncan Kennedy. For Rodell, the institutions of elite legal education work to inculcate careerism and servility. And, for Rodell, the prime exemplar of the baleful influence …
"A Great Dread Of Vulgarity": A Novel Perspective On Christopher Columbus Langdell And The Origins Of The Case Method In American Legal Education, Andrew Yaphe
Andrew Yaphe
When he introduced the case method of teaching to Harvard Law School in the 1870s, Christopher Columbus Langdell permanently changed the shape of American legal education. Despite the enormity of Langdell’s influence on legal pedagogy, we understand surprisingly little about what he intended to accomplish with his innovations. This Article offers an original interpretation of Langdell’s contributions to the way we think about the law and legal education. Reading Langdell in tandem with Gilbert Osmond, the central male character in Henry James’s 1881 novel The Portrait of a Lady, shows Langdell to be an example of a particular type of …