Winner of the 2024 Thomas M. Cooley Book Prize, sponsored by
the Georgetown Law’s Center for the Constitution
“At a moment when the Supreme Court is playing fast and loose with
its notions of the nation’s ‘history and traditions,’ Jack Balkin
provides a much-needed, nuanced, and perceptive analysis of how
lawyers, scholars, and informed citizens should think about
historical interpretations of the Constitution.”—Jack Rakove,
author of Beyond Belief, Beyond Conscience: The Radical
Significance of the Free Exercise of Religion
“Lawyers and historians have long mistrusted each other. In this
remarkable book, one of our most brilliant constitutional theorists
blazes a path towards a more satisfying coexistence by reframing
the many ways history is deployed in the creation of constitutional
claims. Bravo!”—Laura Kalman, Distinguished Research Professor of
History, University of California, Santa Barbara
“History does not belong only to historians. Lawyers and judges
often invoke history to justify arguments they wish to make. Memory
and Authority is a brilliant meditation on how this process has
worked in the past, and should work. This timely intervention is
perfect for our moment, as we consider the future of our democracy
and the rule of law.”—Annette Gordon-Reed, Carl M. Loeb University
Professor, Harvard University
“American lawyers and judges have long turned to the historical
past for guidance and authoritative answers, but never more so than
in recent years. Jack Balkin’s expert navigation of the complex and
contested terrain where law and history intersect is essential
reading for anybody who cares about the nation’s constitutional
practice.”—Jonathan Gienapp, author of The Second Creation: Fixing
the American Constitution in the Founding Era
Ask a Question About this Product More... |