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Judicial biography, writes Dean Larry Kramer, is a difficult genre. The work of judges is not often exciting and cases that a judge decides tend to make up the substance of a judicial life. But, Kramer notes, reading about lawsuits can be less than stimulating.
In reviewing Justice Brennan: Liberal Champion, Kramer finds the authors “were unable to surmount the inherent limitations of the genre.” Kramer notes that the authors faced some serious constraints: Justice Brennan’s life was not particularly interesting before he went on the bench, he was involved in almost nothing off the bench, and he was extremely reserved in and about his personal life. Although Brennan was a friendly, gregarious, and likeable person, Kramer thinks that these qualities themselves made up a form of reserve.
Other publications by this author
- Stanford Law School Dean: We Aim to Teach Our Students Not Just to Spot Problems, But to Solve Them
- Conflict of Laws: Cases, Comments, Questions
- Political Organization and the Future of Democracy
- Two (More) Problems with Originalism
- Law Is More Art Than Science
- Panel on Originalism and Pragmatism
- Foreword
- Beyond the Big Firm: Profiles of Lawyers Who Want Something More
- "The Interest of the Man": James Madison, Popular Constitutionalism, and the Theory of Deliberative Democracy
- Response (Symposium on The People Themselves: Popular Constitutionalism and Judicial Review)
Author
- Larry Kramer
- Stanford Law School
- lkramer@stanford.edu
- 650 723.4455