Convictions: Slate's blog on legal issues



  • Convictions' Poetry Slam: Final Round


    As we segue to May, the month set aside to mark Better Sleep, Good Car Care, Photography, Salad, Eggs, and Barbecue—I kid you not—let's end April's Convictions Poetry Slam with one last post on law and poetry.
     
    Turns out it's the subject of Law and Poetry, 11 Roger Wms. L. Rev. 353 (2006), by Edward J. Eberle and Bernhard Grossfeld, law professors at Roger Williams and Universität Münster, respectively. In addition to discussing some of the questions that Kenji and I explored, the article includes a number of passages mentioned here this month. To talk of Justice Harry A. Blackmun and baseball and of Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and the flag, the authors add Ninth Circuit Judge Stephen Reinhardt's quotation of the anti-lynching ballad Strange Fruit in n.14 of his dissent in a capital punishment case. The article continues with many more examples of ways that law influences poetry and that poetry influences law.  I leave you with one such quote, from "Variations on Variations on a Theme" by Lawrence Joseph, a St. John's law professor:
     
    And that's the law. To bring to light
    most hidden depths. The juror screaming
    defendant's the devil staring at her
    making her insane. The intense strain
    phrasing the truth, the whole truth, nothing
    but sentences, endless sentences.
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