Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Law as a Language, Law as an Art: Reflections on James Boyd White's Keep Law Alive Cover

Law as a Language, Law as an Art: Reflections on James Boyd White's Keep Law Alive

Open Access
|Jan 2021

Abstract

Keep Law Alive, the latest book by law and literature scholar James Boyd White, is an important apologia for the traditional understanding and practice of law in the United States. Law, White argues, has served as a language in a sense closely parallel to what we mean by referring to English or Spanish as a language: law provides those fluent in it with the tools to describe the social world and to imagine its transformation, but without scripting what the speaker must say. White also envisions law as an art that evokes imagination, emotion and personal judgment, as well as the mind, and that is fundamentally oriented toward the realization of justice. Intellectual, social and political changes, however, threaten to displace law as a language and art with a view of law as an essentially empty rhetoric that cloaks the use of abstract and impersonal reasoning often borrowed from other disciplines. The survival of law depends on the willingness of those who speak it to continue its practice as an art that serves a humane vision of political life.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/bjals-2020-0024 | Journal eISSN: 2719-5864 | Journal ISSN: 2049-4092
Language: English
Page range: 155 - 170
Published on: Jan 29, 2021
Published by: Birmingham City University
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2021 H. Jefferson Powell, published by Birmingham City University
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.