Convictions: Slate's blog on legal issues



  • Convictions Poetry Slam


    Today begins National Poetry Month, no foolin'.  Given concerns voiced here about the blindering of America's lawyers, how about honoring  this "cruellest month" with a Convictions Poetry Slam?  Let's hear nominations for best, or worst, law poetry.  By "law poetry" I mean:

    1. use of poetry in legal writing, by judges, lawyers, or legal scholars
    2. poems about law, or about law's effect on society
    3. passages of prose that, intentionally or not, are poetic

    To mark the month over at IntLawGrrls I reprinted America by Gertrude Stein. With effort that poem might be shoehorned into example No. 2. But it's not a great fit, and in any event I'd rather kick off our slam with this snippet, representing example No. 3:

    The facts of this
    case
    are, we must
    hope,
    extraordinary. 

    Michael H. v. Gerald D. (1989), by Antonin Scalia

    More to come as the month unfolds; looking forward to your entries.

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