Clarence Darrow is best remembered as the defense attorney in
some of the most famous (and infamous) cases in American legal
history. With his brilliant closing argument that saved the thrill
killers Leopold and Loeb from the gallows and his impassioned
defense of John T. Scopes's right to teach evolution in the
classroom, Darrow became a legend even in his own time. But such a
towering reputation often obscures the man behind it, and attempts
to shoehorn him into a single political party due to his long
association with the labor movement have only further muddled his
legacy. As the historian Andrew E. Kersten shows in this insightful
biography of America's most celebrated lawyer, neither Darrow's
courtroom performances nor his politics define his career or
enduring importance. Going well beyond the familiar story of the
socially conscious lawyer and drawing upon new archival records,
Kersten reveals that Darrow was an iconoclast driven by the rising
interference of corporations and government in ordinary working
Americans' lives. In the face of the country's inexorable march
toward modernity, Darrow dedicated himself to smashing systems of
social control, fighting for liberty and individualism everywhere
he went.
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