The Word and the Law

Portada
University of Chicago Press, 1993 - 216 páginas
Milner Ball takes an experimental journey into the inner life of law and the careers of men and women who use it to help disadvantaged people and to strengthen the fabric of the communities in which they live. At the center of this book are portraits of seven contemporary legal practitioners—lawyers, judges, and advocates—who have devoted their lives to an unconventional vision of the law. In their work, in areas from New York City housing court to the Warm Springs reservation in Oregon, the law exemplifies fundamental human values, manifestations of what Ball calls the "Word," the presence of God in life. To develop this concept of the Word, Ball explores its workings in familiar literary and biblical texts, primarily William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury, Toni Morrison's Beloved, the Book of Isaiah, and the Gospel of Mark.
 

Contenido

INTRODUCTION
1
Seven Practices in Law
7
Dilsey Baby Suggs and the Nonreligious Word
73
What of Ethics Faith Christian Religion?
96
Mark Isaiah and the Empty Place
106
Aesthetic Meaning and Political Freedom
129
Morbidity and Viability in Law
136
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
165
NOTES
175
INDEX
211
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