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Mark V. Tushnet

Author of Constitutional Law

48+ Works 849 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Mark Tushnet is Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Constitutional Law at Georgetown University Law Center

Includes the name: Mark Tushnet

Works by Mark V. Tushnet

Constitutional Law (1991) 174 copies, 1 review
The First Amendment (1999) 21 copies
Constitutional Democracy in Crisis? (2018) — Editor — 11 copies

Associated Works

Encyclopedia of the American Left (1990) — Contributor, some editions — 119 copies
Foundations of Critical Race Theory in Education (2009) — Contributor — 27 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

7 reviews
Formed around three articles by the authors about First Amendment protection for instrumental music, art (visual/performance), and nonsense, the book explores why the protection of these things at once seems so obvious to modern constitutional scholars and the Supreme Court but also is so difficult to defend using conventional First Amendment theories without a bunch of special pleading. Ultimately, the best answer seems to be that these things are socially understood to be speech—but that show more implies that the categories of “speech” might plausibly change to include (or perhaps exclude?) new things, such as dance or cuisine. The core claim of the book is that “[a]sking the easy questions can be surprisingly disturbing, because it reveals that the First Amendment’s foundations are less settled than we might suppose or want.” And the book does a good job of showing why the easy questions aren’t that easy. show less
Overall - a great analysis and look at the most significant dissenting decisions in the history of the Supreme Court. Was a great spring board for me to be inspired to explore further some of the backdrops/periods/characters involved in or surrounding many of the opinions.

I enjoyed Tushnet's analysis of the dissenting decisions and their historical/societal implications much more than reading the opinions themselves - which can go on and on and on. But what would I expect - these are show more opinions written by Supreme Court Justices!

Recommended - espec for Supreme Court nerds.
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While an excellent selection of pieces this is nonetheless a very odd collection. The editors takes every opportunity to highlight his belief, driven by theories of popular constitutionalism, that the court's decisions don't really matter... so if I thought that, why am I reading a collection of dissents?
Much has been written about Thurgood Marshall, but this is the first book to collect his own words. Here are briefs he filed as a lawyer, oral arguments for the landmark school desegregation cases, investigative reports on race riots and racism in the Army, speeches and articles outlining the history of civil rights and criticizing the actions of more conservative jurists, Supreme Court opinions now widely cited in Constitutional law, a long and complete oral autobiography, and much more.

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Statistics

Works
48
Also by
3
Members
849
Popularity
#30,130
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
7
ISBNs
181
Languages
1

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