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| Book Review | The Journal of American History, 90.2 | The History Cooperative
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September, 2003
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Book Review


The Lost World of Classical Legal Thought: Law and Ideology in America, 1886–1937. By William M. Wiecek. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. x, 286 pp. Cloth, $65.00, ISBN 0-19-511854-5. Paper, $17.95, ISBN 0-19-514713-8.)
Modern American legal history is now a mature scholarly enterprise, an assertion supported by the appendix to William M. Wiecek's The Lost World of Classical Legal Thought. "Historiography and the Supreme Court" is a formal historiographical essay that carries the story to the mid-1990s. The title of the appendix also sums up the work itself—it is an attempt to explain a way of thinking about law as articulated mainly by judges, especially the judges of the United States Supreme Court. . . .

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