Americans seem increasingly disenchanted with their legal
system. In the wake of several high-profile trials, America's faith
in legal authority appears profoundly shaken.
And yet, as David Ray Papke shows in this dramatic and erudite
tour of American history, many Americans have challenged and often
rejected the rule of law since the earliest days of the country's
founding. Papke traces the lineage of such legal heretics from
nineteenth-century activists William Lloyd Garrison and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, through Eugene Debs, and up to more recent radicals,
such as the Black Panther Party, anti-abortionists, and militia
members. A tradition of American legal heresy clearly
emerges--linked together by a body of shared references, idols, and
commitments--that problematizes the American belief in legal
neutrality and highlights the historical conflicts between law and
justice. Questioning the legal faith both peculiar and essential to
American mythology, this alternative tradition is in itself an
overlooked feature of American history and culture.
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