Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Fred Rodell is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Fred Rodell.


Virginia Law Review | 1936

Goodbye to Law Reviews

Fred Rodell

T are two things wrong with almost all legal writing. One is its style. The other is its content. That, I think, about covers the ground. And though it is in the law reviews that the most highly regarded legal literature—and I by no means except those fancy rationalizations of legal action called judicial opinions—is regularly embalmed, it is in the law reviews that a pennyworth of content is most frequently concealed beneath a pound of so-called style. The average law review writer is peculiarly able to say nothing with an air of great importance. When I used to read law reviews, I used constantly to be reminded of an elephant trying to swat a fly. Now the antediluvian or mock-heroic style in which most law review material is written has, as I am well aware, been panned before. That panning has had no effect, just as this panning will have no effect. Remember that it is by request that I am bleating my private bleat about legal literature. To go into the question of style, it seems to be a cardinal principle of law review writing and editing that nothing may be said forcefully and nothing may be said amusingly. This, I take it, is in the interest of something called dignity. It does not matter that most people—and even lawyers come into this category—read either to be convinced or to be entertained. It does not matter that even in the comparatively rare instances when people read to be informed, they like a dash of pepper or a dash of salt along with their information. They won’t get any seasoning if the law reviews can help it. The law reviews would rather be dignified and ignored. Suppose a law review writer wants to criticize a court decision. Does he say “Justice Fussbudget, in a long-winded and vacuous opinion, managed to twist his logic and mangle his history so as to reach a result which is not only reactionary but ridiculous”? He may think exactly that but he does not say it. He does not even say “It was a thoroughly stupid decision.” What he says is—“It would seem that a contrary conclusion might perhaps have been better justified.” “It would seem—,” the matriarch of mollycoddle phrases, still revered by the law reviews in the dull name of dignity.


Virginia Law Review | 1962

Goodbye to Law Reviews – Revisited

Fred Rodell


University of Chicago Law Review | 1956

Nine Men: A Political History of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1790 to 1955

Carl Brent Swisher; Fred Rodell


Archive | 1962

Judicial Review: Its Role in Intergovernmental Relations: A Symposium: For Every Justice, Judicial Deference Is a Sometime Thing

Fred Rodell


Yale Law Journal | 1951

JUSTICE HOLMES AND HIS HECKLERS

Fred Rodell


Yale Law Journal | 1933

REGULATION OF SECURITIES BY THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION

Fred Rodell


Archive | 1969

Symposium: Mr. Justice Douglas: Three Decades of Service: As Justice Douglas Completes His First Thirty Years on the Court: Herewith a Random Anniversary Sample, Complete with a Casual Commentary, of Divers Scraps, Shreds, and Shards Gleaned from a Forty-Year Friendship

Fred Rodell


Society | 1965

Our unlovable sex laws

Fred Rodell


Archive | 1965

For Charles E. Clark: A Brief and Belated but Fond Farewell

Fred Rodell


Archive | 1963

Wesley Alva Sturges: A Tribute, To a Younger Colleague, the Light of a Gentle Genius

Fred Rodell

Collaboration


Dive into the Fred Rodell's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge