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Popular trials: rhetoric, mass media, and the law
Robert Hariman
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Frontmatter
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Preface (page vii)
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Introduction (page 1)
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1. Performing the Laws: Popular Trials and Social Knowledge (Robert Hariman, page 17)
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2. Constitutional Argument in a National Theater: The Impeachment Trail of Dr. Henry Sacheverell (John Louis Lucaites, page 31)
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3. Two Stories of the Scopes Trial: Legal and Journalistic Articulations of the Legitimacy of Science and Religion (Lawrance M. Bernabo and Celeste Michelle Condit, page 55)
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4. Constraints on Persuasion in the Chicago Seven Trial (Juliet Dee, page 86)
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5. Power, Knowledge, and Insanity: The Trial of John W. Hinckley, Jr. (William F. Lewis, page 114)
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6. The Claus von Bulow Retrial: Lights, Camera, Genre? (Susan J. Drucker and Janice Platt Hunold, page 133)
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7. The Saga of Roger Hedgecock: A Case Study in Trial by Local Media (Larry A. Williamson, page 148)
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8. Crime as Rhetoric: The Trial of the Catonsville Nine (J. Justin Gustainis, page 164)
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9. Mediating the Laws: Popular Trials and the Mass Media (Barry Brummett, page 179)
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Notes (page 194)
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Bibliography (page 238)
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Contributors (page 251)
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Index (page 253)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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JAH | 78.2 (1991): 717-718 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2079647 |
Citable Link
Published: 1993
Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
- 9780817304744 (hardcover)
- 9780817381943 (ebook)
- 9780817306984 (paper)