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THE LHR ELECTRONIC RESOURCE PAGE
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Changing Our Minds: Legal History Meets the World Wide Web
BERNARD J. HIBBITTS
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Legal historians have had an ambivalent relationship with new technology.
As students and spokespersons of the somewhat-stodgy legal past, our
sympathies have predictably been with traditional methods of doing things
rather than with the latest and greatest devices of our own age. In the
twentieth century we have tended to champion writing and books more than
radio, television, and computers. Today we may use new tools to help us
create our scholarship and even to help us teach, but like most of our
academic colleagues in law and in history we generally employ those tools
as extensions of established media instead of exploiting their potential to
deploy information and develop ideas in new ways.
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Our first forays into cyberspace have been consistent with precedent. So
far we have tended to use the World Wide Web as a virtual
photocopiera technology that allows us to deliver electronic copies
of our traditional products (journals, articles, conference papers,
syllabi, and so forth)to a mass audience of scholars, students, and
other interested parties. Now this in itself is not
insignificantreaching a worldwide, interdisciplinary public and
bringing information and ideas to bear on them at a fraction of the cost of
older media is something to be celebrated, not criticized. But before we
become self-satisfied, we should consider the technological and indeed
metaphysical distance that exists between the Web as legal historians now
use it and the Web as it could be used.
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This distance exists in a number of dimensions. For example, the Web need
not be just a one-way presentation tool. It also supports e-mail, chat, and
collaborative editing scripts that facilitate interactivity and teamwork;
in these capacities the Web could one day shift the emphasis of our
scholarship from monologue to dialogue, finally transforming faculty lounge
rhetoric into reality. We also tend to use the Web as an electronic archive
of finished products. But the quick and easy revisability of Web documents
favors the development of dynamic works that may derive their academic
worth more from their currency than from their completion.
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In this column, however, I want to consider another underutilized aspect of
the Web that I think holds even greater potential for the transformation of
legal history as a discipline. The Web is a multimedia tool: not only can
it carry text, but it can transmit speech, sound, images, and
videoand one day, given the ability of computer technology to
digitize sensations of touch and smell, perhaps even more.
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The multimedia capacity of the Web may not be obvious to everyone, not even
to some legal historians who may use it frequently. A number of prosaic
factors still conspire to occlude itthe lack of speakers on many
office computer systems, the lack of "plug-ins" (like the RealPlayer)
needed to display voice and video files, slow network connections that may
lead some Web users to just turn off their images, the survival in some
quarters of text-only Lynx browsers, and so forth. As our connections speed
up, our machines improve, and we ourselves gain more online experience,
however, the multimedia power of the Web will become more and more obvious.
We will not simply read onlinewe will also listen and watch.
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But the Internet is more than a passive community of people accessing
informationat its best, it is also an active community of users who
create content. In a Web-based multimedia environment in which audio and
video tools are readily and cheaply available, legal historians and others
will be subtly encouraged (indeed, they will eventually be expected) to
present themselves and their ideas in sound, in color, in image, in
gesturein other words, to become producers and performers instead of
just writers. The transition to this new multimedia scholarship will not be
easy. The present generation of legal historians has been overtly selected
for its members' ability to present words on a page, not ideas in action.
The Web challenges us to develop new literaciesvisual, chromatic,
aural, and even kineticthat will allow us to "read" and "write" in
new ways. Text composition may remain the foundation of what we do for some
time, but it will be no longer be the be-all and end-all of our scholarly
existence. At some point, senior faculty and administrators in law schools
and history departments might even consider making mastery of these new
technologically mediated literacies a prerequisite of hiring and promotion.
This proposal might strike some as peculiar, even ridiculous, but in theory
is it any less peculiar than our long-standing requirement that in a
text-based society, legal historians be highly skilled manipulators of
text?
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If the Web encourages us to seek new expressive horizons, it may
alsosomewhat more subtlyencourage us to reconsider the
parameters of legal history itself. Traditionally and predictably, legal
history presented in text has focused on texts. Written material has
provided the discipline with its most important form of evidence and its
most common object of interpretation. We have certainly been aware of
"contextual" elements of (and survivals from) the legal pastoral
tradition, rhetoric, gesture, ceremony, costume, architecture, and so
forthbut the scholarly requirement of pushing our ideas through print
has largely filtered out direct representations of those and has severely
limited our ability to discuss them intelligently. With a different set of
media at our disposal, legal historians in the age of cyberspace will not
be so limited. Indeed, as we become comfortable with new media, we will
probably take a far greater interest in "sensual" aspects of law that will
be both more obvious and more accessible to us.
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Over time, new technological tools and the new horizons they open up will
almost certainly make the future of legal history more than just its past
by other means. Given the scale of the information revolution that we are just beginning to experience, it is taking no great risk to suggest that as purveyors of
text-based, text-driven academic monologues, we will eventually appear as
quaint and as narrow to our colleagues of the late twenty-first century as
our academic forebearers of the late nineteenth or perhaps even late
eighteenth century now appear to us. The Web invites us to change our
mindsto think about doing and regarding legal history in new ways. Carpe diem.
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Bernard J. Hibbitts is associate dean
for communications and information technology and professor of
law at the University of Pittsburgh. He is also the director of
JURIST: The Law Professors' Network
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu .
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