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Book Review
Norman Cantor, Imagining the Law: Common Law and the Foundations of
the American Legal System, New York: Harper-Collins, 1997. Pp. xvi
+ 416. $35.00 (ISBN 0-06-017194-4).
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Having had his say about other historians' "inventing the
middle ages," Norman Cantor now turns to his own "imagining" of
the law. Cantor began his career in the 1950s as perhaps the brightest
star among American medievalists of that generationan extraordinarily
popular undergraduate lecturer as well as a fine scholar, whose
projected trilogy on Church-State relations in the eleventh and
twelfth centuries never got beyond an impressive first volume, Church,
Kingship, and Lay Investiture in England 1089-1135. After that
Cantor turned his hand, prolifically, to the writing and editing
of textbooks, anthologies, and works of popularization concerning
the meaning of the Middle Ages and, offhandedly, the fads and foibles
of our own multiculturally embattled times. He has also written
extensively, provocatively, and sometimes recklessly about medievalists
he has known, and their own fads and foibles. The present book,
while it displays features of Cantor's early erudition and expertise,
is largely a product of the later stages of his career, especially
of his undergraduate lectures and adult education popularizations,
adorned as usual with opinions about contemporary scholars, career
making, and the condition of Anglophone culture. |
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Cantor wants to reach as large a public
as possible, as indicated by his informal, sometimes jocular style
and by his efforts at contemporary parallels. "This book is written
for the layman and the beginning student," he declaresand
perhaps for practicing lawyers (who are also laymen as far as history
is concerned, especially in this country). What, for such an audience,
is the "meaning" of legal history? |
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Cantor recognizes seven "paradigms"
and characterizes them in a summary and sententious fashion. There
is: (1) "the mainline approach" (Maitland, J. W. Hurst, perhaps
Geoffrey Elton, to whom Cantor dedicates his book); (2) Marxism
(Morton Horowitz), for which "legal systems simply serve as the
instruments of dominant classes"; (3) the "Foucault-feminist power,
pessimism" view, which assumes that the law "serves the holders
of power at any time and place"; (4) the "Lacanian, psychoanalytic"
approach, which "somehow connect[s] judicial and psychosexual forms
of repression"; (5) the "precomputer" structuralism of Lévi-Strauss,
which reduces mind and society to "common binary structural forms"
as part of a universal system; (6) deconstructionism, which separates
law from ethics and regards it as "intrinsically fragile and ...
susceptible to breakdown, contradiction and alteration"; and (7)
"law and economics," which sees the law "through the prism of market
economics" ("critical legal studies"CLSincluding various
combinations of approaches 2-6). |
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Although for Cantor "these appellations
are largely marketing devices within legal academia" and have produced
no synthesis, they are unavoidable; and he takes the historian's
job to be to "pick his or her way eclectically among the theories
as the opportunity arises" and above all "to tell a clear and emotionally
satisfying story." Cantor's story is indeed clearnot for him
the niceties of British revisionism that rejects large continuities
in histories of any sortand, arguably, emotionally satisfying,
given his penchant for the amusing anecdote, the plausible parallel,
the ad hominem interjections, and the allusions to such contemporary
subjects as "LA Law," Umberto Eco, and O. J. Simpson. Cicero is
introduced less as a great advocate than as a successful practitioner
of the art of "lawyering"; and resuscitated in our time, Cantor
notes, Cicero would do as well teaching young students this careerist
art as "the smoothie" hired away from Stanford to give the course
on this subject, "Lawyering," at Cantor's university. |
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According to Cantor, what
has expanded the science of the law beyond its technical and political
confines has been the "penumbra doctrine," as Cantor calls it, which
merges law with ethics and encourages irrelevant appeals to extralegal
ideals and aspirationsexemplified not only by Cicero's bombast
but also by inflammatory issues such as legalized abortion. Legal
positivism and professional conventions deplore such deviation into
social and moral questions; but of course this is precisely what
legal historians have to investigate, to interpret, and of course
to "imagine" for laymen whether of history or of the law. Indeed
much of this book seems to be penumbral in this sense.
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Nevertheless, while trying to satisfy
emotions, Cantor also provides a comprehensive and up-to-date narrative
of the history of Anglo-American law, with critical comparisons
with the Romanist tradition of "Justinian law" [sic]. He carries
the story of common law from Glanville down to the O. J. trialfrom
the "legal revolution" of the twelfth century down to the state
of Anglo-American law in the 1990s. The first key figure is Bracton,
who was the first to introduce theory (drawn mainly from Roman law
but also scholasticism and Magna Carta) into the unruly growth of
English custom. Bracton is characterized by Cantor, variously and
imaginatively, as "a medieval Holmes," a plausible secondary character
in a Hardy novel, and a prototype of a late-1960s student radical.
After Bracton English law flowed on, cutting ever broadening social
and cultural as well as legal channels on its way to its modern
eminence. Not that Cantor is uncritical of the excesses of English
legal tradition"common law is not necessarily equated with
freedom"but for him it has become an extraordinarily strong
and durable culture that is, by and large, not only Memorable but
also (in the famous words of 1066 and All That) a Good Thing. |
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What gives coherence and continuity
to this story and the primary link with Anglo-American law in the
age of the internet is the judicial and constitutional "liberalism,"
which appears first in Bracton and Magna Carta and which is reinforced
by quo warranto proceedings, parliamentary traditions, gentrification,
Coke, the Glorious Revolution, Blackstone, and other familiar features
of the Stubbsian paradigm. And what further reinforces this continuity
has been the course of legal education and, despite its own growing
excesses, the profession of law and lawyering. |
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This is the old Whig view, Stubbs
with a dash of Dickens, but updated through modern scholarship and
interpretations and reinforced by arguments about the "deep structure"
and "deep culture" of the common law, which (concludes Cantor) still
functions well in the globalizing world at millennium's end. Perhaps.
But (thinking of the readership of this journal) how much of this
is penumbral, how much the opining and imagining of an author devoted
more, these days, to popularization than to scholarship? |
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Donald R. Kelley
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Rutgers University
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