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Born to a Jewish immigrant shopkeeper in a small Alabama town,
Morris Ernst used aggressive self-promotion and exaggeration-what
he called "exhibitionism"-to transcend his insecurities and his
part-time legal training to become one of America's most famous
lawyers. During the first half of the twentieth century, Ernst
championed free speech, sexual education, birth control, and
reproductive health, and his landmark defense of James Joyce's
Ulysses in 1933 cemented Ernst's reputation as the top progressive
attorney of the era. To promote himself, Ernst befriended newspaper
writers, authors, actors, politicians, any practically anyone whose
work carried some weight in popular culture. But his hunger for
respect and recognition, and his need for excitement, led Ernst to
lavish praise on J. Edgar Hoover and to publicly defend, and profit
from, a Dominican dictator. Ernst thereby undermining his own
credibility and largely fell out of favor with the public. By
examining key moments of his life and career, The Legal
Exhibitionist describes how Ernst's exhibitionism led to his rise
and fall and suggests how his strategy of exaggeration anticipated
the rise of today's celebrity lawyers.
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