Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-18-2015
Abstract
The distinction between modernism and postmodernism in legal scholarship is highly complex This Essay does not explore this problem in depth but builds on the recognition that most modernist scholars expressly articulate and defend normative values and goals while postmodern scholars rarely do so Postmodernists are themselves enmeshed within the structures of scholarly and lawyerly discourse As such they must construct narratives and arguments that use the available rhetorical tools of discoursenamely they must use modernist and postmodernist concepts to present their views But whereas modernist scholars use similar tools with earnestness postmodernist scholars use these tools with irony Postmodernists use the tools despite knowing that they cannot perform as promised in particular modernist tools cannot deliver any indubitably grounded results In this sense postmodern scholarship amounts to playing with the pieceseven the fallen pieces that remain from deconstructed modernist positions
Recommended Citation
Feldman, Stephen Matthew, "Playing with the Pieces: Postmodernism in the Lawyer's Toolbox" (2015). Faculty Articles. 112.
https://scholarship.law.uwyo.edu/faculty_articles/112
First Page
151