Front cover image for Acts of hope : creating authority in literature, law, and politics

Acts of hope : creating authority in literature, law, and politics

To which institutions or social practices should we grant authority? When should we instead assert our own sense of what is right or good or necessary? In this book, James Boyd White shows how texts by some of our most important thinkers and writers, including Plato, Shakespeare, Dickinson, Mandela, and Lincoln, answer these questions, not in the abstract, but in the way they wrestle with the claims of the world and self in particular historical and cultural contexts. As they define afresh the institutions or practices for which they claim (or resist) authority, they create authorities of their own, in the very modes of thought and expression they employ. They imagine their world anew and transform the languages that give it meaning. In so doing, White maintains, these works teach us about how to read and judge claims of authority made by others upon us how to decide to which institutions and practices we should grant authority and how to create authorities of our own through our thoughts and arguments
Print Book, English, 1994
University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1994
xv, 322 pages ; 24 cm
9780226895109, 9780226895116, 0226895106, 0226895114
30079214
Plato's Crito: the authority of law and philosophy
Shakespeare's Richard II: imagining the modern world
Hooker's preface to the Lawes of Ecclesiasticall Politie: constituting authority in argument
Hale's "Considerations touching the Amendment or Alteration of Lawes": determining the authority of the past
Planned Parenthood v. Casey: legal judgment as an ethical and cultural art
Austen's Mansfield Park: making the self out of
and against
the culture
Dickinson's poetry: transforming the authority of language
Mandela's speech from the dock and Lincoln's second inaugural address: giving meaning to life in an unjust world