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A Law Unto Itself?: Essays in the New Louisiana Legal History
Contributor(s): Billings, Warren M. (Editor), Fernandez, Mark (Editor)
ISBN: 0807125830     ISBN-13: 9780807125830
Publisher: LSU Press
OUR PRICE:   $42.70  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: January 2001
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: Louisiana's legal heritage has long been a source of fascination, curiosity, and sadly, misinformation. Outsiders have viewed the legal system as an anomaly and have shunned its study because of its perceived quirkiness. Moreover, past writings about the state's legal structure have focused on the minutiae of Louisiana's civil law origins, adding to an image of peculiarity. Consequently, Louisiana has been generally ignored in treatments of American or southern legal history. Recently, however, a new vision has emerged -- the New Louisiana Legal History. A product of an energetic cadre of writers, this rendering explores new methods and areas of research with the aim of integrating Louisiana into the mainstream of American legal history, southern history, and American history in general.

Proponents of the New Louisiana Legal History have consistently refused to view law in a vacuum, opting instead for interpretative schemes that mingle social, political, and intellectual history into modes of analysis that treat all things legal as one strand in a complex cultural matrix. The ten essays in this volume -- which address law in the state through the nineteenth century -- exemplify the present condition of the New Louisiana Legal History. Topics range from the impact of the printed word on the evolution of Louisiana law, the economic and civic implications of legal publishing during the territorial and antebellum periods, and the military courts in Union-occupied New Orleans to the consequences of the flurry of emancipation cases in New Orleans in the two years before the Civil War, the use of the courts to attack society's conventions, and the legal status of free people of color inantebellum New Orleans.

A Law unto Itself? marks the coming of age of the New Louisiana Legal History. Grounded in novel research methodologies and underutilized manuscripts, it links the distinctive history of Louisiana law to the wider contexts of southern and American history and offers an exciting new interpretation of the state's unique past.

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Law | Legal History
- History | United States - State & Local - General
Dewey: 349.763
LCCN: 00009838
Physical Information: 0.93" H x 6.29" W x 9.33" (1.20 lbs) 208 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Deep South
- Cultural Region - Gulf Coast
- Cultural Region - South
- Geographic Orientation - Louisiana
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Louisiana's legal heritage has long been a source of fascination, curiosity, and sadly, misinformation. Outsiders have viewed the legal system as an anomaly and have shunned its study because of its perceived quirkiness. Moreover, past writings about the state's legal structure have focused on the minutiae of Louisiana's civil law origins, adding to an image of peculiarity. Consequently, Louisiana has been generally ignored in treatments of American or southern legal history. Recently, however, a new vision has emerged the New Louisiana Legal History. A product of an energetic cadre of writers, this rendering explores new methods and areas of research with the aim of integrating Louisiana into the mainstream of American legal history, southern history, and American history in general.
The ten essays in this volume -- which address law in the state through the nineteenth century -- mark the coming of age of the New Louisiana Legal History. Grounded in novel research methodologies and underutilized manuscripts, this book links the distinctive history of Louisiana law to the wider contexts of southern and American history and offers an exciting new interpretation of the state's unique past.