Table of Contents
Editorial Practice
Preface, Ronald Dworkin
Introduction, Constance Jordan
Correspondence, Learned Hand
Prologue: A Better Social Philosophy, 1897-1908
Part I: The United States and Europe, 1909-1920
Part II: In for Democracy, 1921-1931
Part III: World War and World Power, 1932-1946
Part IV: The Bill of Rights, 1947-1958
Epilogue: "Pagan and Puritan," 1959-1961
Cases in Correspondence
Biographies
Bibliography
Constance Jordan is Professor of English and Comparative Literature Emerita at Claremont Graduate University. Jordan has published many books and articles on the subject of literature and the law. She is also Learned Hand's granddaughter.
"...[Reason and Imagination] traces Hand's intellectual journey
through the words of Hand himself and those of his correspondents,
especially his friends Felix Frankfurter and Walter Lippmann...the
letters in Reason and Imagination offer a narrative arc: Hand
adopted a firm philosophy of judicial restraint early in life, as a
means toward progressive political ends-and stuck with the
philosophy, as the years passed, as an end in itself."
--Adam J. White, Wall Street Journal
"Sympathetic, dense, and finely annotated array of letters....The
letters Hand wrote reinforce the clear-cut sense that the most
vital part of his life was the role he played as a shaper of law.
He was its master because he was its servant. As a matter of
conviction, he felt bound by limits that the law imposed on him.
Yet when he felt liberated by those limits, he was an extraordinary
model of what every federal judge should aspire to be." -Lincoln
Caplan,
New York Review of Books
"Reason and Imagination is a magnificent contribution. Learned Hand
is one of America's most significant legal/judicial thinkers, and
his correspondence, impeccably edited by eminent literary scholar
Constance Jordan, is a treasure trove of insights on subjects as
diverse as free speech, the judicial role, the role of rational
analysis and empathetic imagination in judging, and the nature of
ethical thought itself."
-- Martha Nussbaum, Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of
Law and Ethics, The University of Chicago
"Learned Hand earned a place among the great jurists of his age,
worthy of comparison with the likes of Holmes, Brandeis, and
Cardozo. This collection of letters helps us understand what a
remarkable man he was. Reading these letters places us at the elbow
of a man of uncommon erudition, a philosopher constantly asking
questions about the world around him, a master of style and
language. We are admitted to an age when letters, in the right
hands, were essays
on the human condition, on the great issues of the time. Dip into
this book anywhere, and you will quickly be drawn into an evening
of wit and wisdom."
--A.E. Dick Howard, White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and
Public Affairs, University of Virginia
"Read together, the correspondence of Learned Hand provide
tremendous insight into the key constitutional and jurisprudential
issues of the 20th century. They also give a real sense of the
person who was one of the greatest judges in American history. In
this impeccably organizes and presented volume, Constance Jordan
has done a profound service for all who are interested in American
law."
--Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean and Distinguished Professor of Law,
University of California, Irvine School of Law
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