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University of Georgia School of Law

1995

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Full-Text Articles in Legal Education

Volume 30, Issue 1 (Fall 1995), University Of Georgia School Of Law Oct 1995

Volume 30, Issue 1 (Fall 1995), University Of Georgia School Of Law

Advocate Magazine

TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • Graduation 1995: The Legacy of Total Excellence
  • In Tribute: Dean Lindsey Cowen, 1920-1995
  • Salute: Moot Court Alumni & Friends Honor Jere Morehead
  • Introducing UGA Law Students to the World: A Wealth of Opportunity Through International Programs
  • New York Times Spotlight on UGA Alums: Small-Town Practice Proves Attractive for Rising Number of Lawyers
  • Faculty Scholarship - With the Court Overrule Garcia?--Professor Dan T. Coenen; Making the Case Against Physician-Assisted Suicide--Professor Edward J. Larson
  • Report of Annual Giving: 20-Page Insert Found in the Center of The Georgia Advocate
  • UGA in the News - Synopsis of the Year in the …


Volume 29, Issue 2 (Spring 1995), University Of Georgia School Of Law Apr 1995

Volume 29, Issue 2 (Spring 1995), University Of Georgia School Of Law

Advocate Magazine

TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • Free Trial v. Fair Press
  • Striving for Excellence: The School of Law's Service to the Profession and the Public
  • Law Day 1995
  • Remembering Dean Rusk: February 9, 1909 - December 20, 1994
  • My, How Times Have Changed!
  • From Athens to Albania
  • Faculty Scholarship
  • Faculty
  • Law Library
  • Programs
  • Alumni
  • Students Compendium
  • Class Notes


Law And Literature Defining Itself, Paul J. Heald Mar 1995

Law And Literature Defining Itself, Paul J. Heald

Scholarly Works

Earlier this spring, the University of Chicago Law School convinced Martha Nussbaum, University Professor of Philosophy, Comparative Literature, and Classics at Brown University, to join its faculty to teach law and literature. At Michigan and Duke, James B. White and Stanley Fish have long held joint appointments in their respective law schools and English departments. What use can law schools possibly have for literary critics? Although over 60 law schools, including Georgia, currently offer a class in law and literature, the focus of this interdisciplinary enterprise remains somewhat fuzzy.