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5 Law, Culture & Human. 1 (2009)

handle is hein.journals/lculh5 and id is 1 raw text is: 

Law,  Culture and the Humanities 2009; 5: 1-2


EDITORIAL






History has a special place in the humanistic study of law at least according
to conventional wisdom.  It helps to remind us of the contingencies of the
present and  of the ways time plays out in our thinking about law. More-
over, we know that law responds to historical change and that it also makes
history.
  The  three pieces in our  Commentary Section, Making Sense of the
Past re-examine the conventional  wisdom  about how  we as legal scholars
and  how legal officials can and do make sense of the past. They open up
new  avenues  of inquiry and remind  us of the complexities of law's rela-
tionship to the past.
  Among   those  relationships, humanists can and  should attend to law's
role as an author of history.' Law writes the past, not just its own past, but
the past for those over whom law seeks to exercise its dominion. Law con-
structs a history which it wants to present as authoritative when as Laura
Kalman  argues  no historian considers the past authoritative.2 And, law
uses history to tell us who we are.
  Law  looks to the past as it speaks to present needs. In the adjudication
of every dispute, law traffics in the slippery terrain of memory as different
versions of past events are presented for authoritative judgment.  More-
over, in the production of supposedly definitive statements of what the law
is in the form of judicial opinions law reconstructs its own past, tracing out
lines of precedent to their compelling conclusion. The  relationship of
law to history is thus complex and multidirectional.
  The  most obvious  example  of the way law constructs and uses history is
found  in the doctrine of stare decisis and the practice of justifying present
decisions in light of precedent.3 In the common  law tradition the past is
supposed  to govern the present. Like cases are to be treated alike. Prece-
dent tells a judge to adhere to the decision in a previous similar case. As
Shauer  notes, an argument   from  precedent  ... urges that a decision


  1. The following argument is adapted from Austin Sarat and Thomas R. Kearns, Writing
     History and Registering Memory in Legal Decisions and Legal Practices: An Introduc-
     tion,  in Austin Sarat and Thomas R. Kearns, History, Memory and Law. Ann Arbor,
     University of Michigan Press, 1999, 3-6
  2. Laura Kalman, The Strange Career ofLiberalLegalism, New Haven: Yale University Press,
     1996, 180.
  3. Alfred Kelly, Clio and the Court: An illicit Love Affair, The Supreme Court Review
     (1965), 122; also Frederick Shauer, Precedent, 39 Stanford Law Review (1987), 571.
     Peter Burke asks What is the function of social memory? He speculates that if a lawyer
     were asked he or she might well discuss the importance of custom and precedent, the
     justification or legitimation of actions in the present with reference to the past. . . . His-
     tory As Social Memory, in Thomas Butler, ed., Memory: History Culture and the Mind.
     Oxford: Blackwell, 1989, 105.


© 2009Association for the Study of Law, Culture and the Humanities


10. 117 7/17438 72108096859

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