The World of Benjamin Cardozo: Personal Values and the Judicial Process / Edition 1

The World of Benjamin Cardozo: Personal Values and the Judicial Process / Edition 1

by Richard Polenberg
ISBN-10:
0674960521
ISBN-13:
9780674960527
Pub. Date:
11/15/1999
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
ISBN-10:
0674960521
ISBN-13:
9780674960527
Pub. Date:
11/15/1999
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
The World of Benjamin Cardozo: Personal Values and the Judicial Process / Edition 1

The World of Benjamin Cardozo: Personal Values and the Judicial Process / Edition 1

by Richard Polenberg

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Overview

"The sordid controversies of litigants," Benjamin Cardozo once said, are "the stuff from which great and shining truths will ultimately be shaped." As one of America's most influential judges, first on New York State's Court of Appeals and then on the United States Supreme Court, Cardozo (1870-1938) oversaw this transformation daily. How he arrived at his rulings, with their far-reaching consequences, becomes clear in this book, the first to explore the connections between Benjamin Cardozo's life and his jurisprudence.

An intensely private man whose friends destroyed much of his correspondence, Cardozo has long eluded scrutiny. But through extraordinary effort Richard Polenberg has uncovered letters, briefs, transcripts, and biographical details to give us a complex living picture of this man whose judicial opinions continue to affect us. Polenberg describes the shaping experiences of Cardozo's youth, among them the death of his mother when he was nine years old; religious training in the Spanish-Portuguese Synagogue; two years of private tutoring by Horatio Alger, Jr.; and his reaction to the scandal that prompted his father to resign from the New York Supreme Court. Then, in light of certain cases that were brought before the Court of Appeals, we see how Cardozo's rulings reflected a system of beliefs rooted in these early experiences; how, despite his famous detachment, Cardozo read evidence and precedents selectively and based his decisions regarding issues from rape and divorce to the insanity plea on his own views about morality, scholarship, and sexuality. Here too is the truth behind Cardozo's renowned liberalism, explored through his rulings on New Deal measures such as the Social Security Act and his more conservative decisions in cases involving conscientious objectors and the rights of criminal defendants.

The Benjamin Cardozo who emerges from these pages, a complicated and intriguing figure, points to a new understanding of the shaping of American law.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674960527
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 11/15/1999
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Richard Polenberg is Goldwin Smith Professor of American History at Cornell University.

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

Prologue: A Man of Fastidious Reticence

Such a Delicate Youth

The Insanity Defense

Scholars and Universities

Gender and Sexuality

Religion and the State

Law and Order

Epilogue: A Contested Legacy

Notes

Manuscript Sources

Selected Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

Aviam Soifer

Richard Polenberg's The World of Benjamin Cardozo is a very impressive, pathbreaking account involving one of the most important judicial figures in American law. Polenberg offers a scrupulously researched, balanced, and yet iconoclastic account. He deals with fundamental areas in which Cardozo is assumed to have made major contributions as a judge. The book does a beautiful job of interweaving biographical details of the life of Cardozo, a confirmed isolate, with his struggle to be detached and scientific about the law...Through its rich sampling of biographical details combined with brief, but still often deep visits to a number of key areas of doctrinal development, this book fleshes out a vital, enduring dilemma about judging. It is original and important, and its style is wonderfully accessible to an audience beyond lawyers, though it ought to have a very broad readership among those educated in law...The book is unusually well-written and provocative in the very best sense.
Aviam Soifer, Boston College Law School

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