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1
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85022880464
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Landauer's excellent essay for this symposium on the social-science sources of the on which Hurst drew for his general ideas greatly helps to clarify why Hurst was inclined to portray the practical consciousness structuring the workings of the legal system as so general and uniform. Landauer tells us that he had adapted from contemporary cultural anthropologists and post-Freudians their theory of a “fully articulated cultural structure… in which the parts work perfectly together” as the governing value system of a society (80). As Landauer says, pieces of the “puzzle that did not quite fit”-for instance, Jacksonian anti-corporate sentiment, abolitionist and temperance societies
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Landauer's excellent essay for this symposium on the social-science sources of the 1950s on which Hurst drew for his general ideas greatly helps to clarify why Hurst was inclined to portray the practical consciousness structuring the workings of the legal system as so general and uniform. Landauer tells us that he had adapted from contemporary cultural anthropologists and post-Freudians their theory of a “fully articulated cultural structure… in which the parts work perfectly together” as the governing value system of a society (80). As Landauer says, pieces of the “puzzle that did not quite fit”-for instance, Jacksonian anti-corporate sentiment, abolitionist and temperance societies, “controversies over Masonic lodges, Catholic convents and schools and Mormon communities”-Hurst set aside as marginal.
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(1950)
“controversies over Masonic lodges, Catholic convents and schools and Mormon communities”-Hurst set aside as marginal
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3
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85022765381
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State ex rel. Owen v. Donald, 160 Wis. 21, 151 N.W. 331, analyzed in Hurst
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State ex rel. Owen v. Donald, 160 Wis. 21, 151 N.W. 331 (1915), analyzed in Hurst, Law and Economic Growth, 571-91.
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(1915)
Law and Economic Growth
, pp. 571-591
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4
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85022880659
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Reviews in American History 20, no. 1 : 135, 136, commenting on “Part V: The Bar,” in James Willard Hurst, The Growth of American Law: The Lawmakers (Boston: Little, Brown, 1950)
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Aviam Soifer, “In Retrospect: Willard Hurst, Consensus History, and The Growth of American Law,” Reviews in American History 20, no. 1 (1992): 135, 136, commenting on “Part V: The Bar,” in James Willard Hurst, The Growth of American Law: The Lawmakers (Boston: Little, Brown, 1950), 249-375.
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(1992)
“In Retrospect: Willard Hurst, Consensus History, and The Growth of American Law,”
, pp. 249-375
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Soifer, A.1
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