Just Silences: The Limits and Possibilities of Modern Law

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Princeton University Press, Jan 10, 2009 - Law - 224 pages

Is the Miranda warning, which lets an accused know of the right to remain silent, more about procedural fairness or about the conventions of speech acts and silences? Do U.S. laws about Native Americans violate the preferred or traditional "silence" of the peoples whose religions and languages they aim to "protect" and "preserve"? In Just Silences, Marianne Constable draws on such examples to explore what is at stake in modern law: a potentially new silence as to justice.


Grounding her claims about modern law in rhetorical analyses of U.S. law and legal texts and locating those claims within the tradition of Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Foucault, Constable asks what we are to make of silences in modern law and justice. She shows how what she calls "sociolegal positivism" is more important than the natural law/positive law distinction for understanding modern law. Modern law is a social and sociological phenomenon, whose instrumental, power-oriented, sometimes violent nature raises serious doubts about the continued possibility of justice. She shows how particular views of language and speech are implicated in such law.


But law--like language--has not always been positivist, empirical, or sociological, nor need it be. Constable examines possibilities of silence and proposes an alternative understanding of law--one that emerges in the calling, however silently, of words to justice. Profoundly insightful and fluently written, Just Silences suggests that justice today lies precariously in the silences of modern positive law.

 

Contents

Signs of Silence
1
Chapter One The Rhetoric of Modern Law
8
Sociolegal Studies and Political Voice
45
Chapter Three What Voice Is This?
74
Chapter Four Flags Words Laws and Things
93
Chapter Five Behind the Rules
111
Chapter Six The Field of Pain and Death
132
The Miranda Warning as Speech Act
149
Conclusion
175
Epilogue
179
Appendix 1
181
Works Cited
184
Index
199
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About the author (2009)

Marianne Constable is Professor of Rhetoric at the University of California, Berkeley. Her previous book, The Law of the Other: The Mixed Jury and Changing Conceptions of Citizenship, Law, and Knowledge, won the J. Willard Hurst Prize in Legal History.

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