
Postmodernism and You: Law

Gary Saalman, Contributor
Rodney King, a black man from Los Angeles was
apprehended by police in 1992. During the course of a violent
confrontation, police severely beat him with night sticks after
stunning him with stun-guns. But a private camera recorded the
beating for the entire nation to see. Months later, an all-white
jury acquitted the officers involved, provoking a riot which burned
hundreds of buildings, injuring and killing scores of people.
African American citizens in Los Angeles and across the country
were enraged at the confirmation of their worst suspicions--blacks
cannot get justice from the white American justice system. Later,
the officers were convicted by a federal court, but the doubts
remained. What if there had been no camera running? Would anyone
have taken Rodney King's word that he had been beaten? Or would
he have been blamed for any violence during the arrest?
Incidents like this have highlighted questions
about the fairness of law in America.
Our Present Legal System
Operating a legal system along the lines of traditional
American legal doctrine requires that people be rational beings
who understand reality. Traditional legal theorists believe legal
processes can yield a relatively fixed set of correct answers
to legal questions. They believe judges can and should remain
objective, neutral and disinterested in their decision-making.
In recent years, however, postmodernism has risen
to the forefront of legal theory. Postmodern theorists, also known
as "anti-foundationalists" and "critical legal
students," claim the law cannot have any foundation because
there is no foundation for objective knowledge of any kind.
They say we cannot objectively understand reality because all
knowledge is contingent on social convention (especially language).
Postmodernists discount individuals' capability to reason and
to discern truth. Instead, they demonstrate how each social
group focuses on certain tenets favorable to their particular
group.
Principles of law could never reflect universal
truths, they argue, only allocations of power among social groups.
According to these scholars, it is senseless to talk about whether
a law is right or wrong or moral or amoral. Law is whatever
the most powerful cultural group in society makes it.
Postmodernism's influence in the law raises fundamental
challenges to the legal system. If law is not objective, if it
does not embody values to which we all should adhere, then why
should citizens be bound by it? Is law merely a naked assertion
of power by one group over another?
Postmodernism's Prominence In Legal Theory
Although hard to measure, most observers agree
that postmodern theories of law are exerting a huge influence
today in the courtroom and the legislature. According to Peter
Schank, postmodernism "has emerged to become as dominant
in legal theory as any paradigm in the past." Another
authority says, "Aspects of postmodern philosophy . . . have
by now thoroughly infiltrated academic legal analysis."
Gary Minda claims, "Postmoderns have redefined the benchmark
for evaluating the cogency of reasoning and the validity of the
evidence."
The Critical Legal Studies Movement
Since the 1970's a group of professors have been
organizing what became the critical legal studies movement. They
argued that the law was biased in that it reflected the political
ideology of a ruling class and protected their interests. The
professors maintained that legal principles and rules, though
designed to appear neutral, were in fact loaded in favor of the
wealthier classes, as professor Kelman explains,
"If there is a single theme [in Critical
Legal Studies], it is that law is an instrument of social,
economic, and political domination, both in the sense of furthering
the concrete interests of the dominators and in that of legitimating
the existing order. This approach emphasizes the ideological character
of legal doctrine, and is therefore more concerned with its internal
structure than the approach that focuses on latent social functions."
Organizers of the first Critical Legal Studies
conference were repelled by the "traditionalist" or
"formalist" approach to the law and legal studies. They
rejected the notion that neutral and nonpolitical legal reasoning
could resolve most controversies. Like other postmodernists,
they believe that language means different things to different
cultures, and that language shapes thinking. They argue that reason
is never fully reliable because it is never actually objective.
What masquerades as objective legal reasoning is actually the
reassertion of the rights of the privileged.
The Principles of Critical Legal Studies
While we do not have the space here to develop
the areas fully as we do in The Death of Truth, we can
at least name their primary principles:
- All Legal "Truths" are Mental Constructs
Shaped by Social Convention
- The Law Seeks Wrongful Legitimization
- The Law is Full of Indeterminacy, Incoherence
and Contradiction
- There Are No Foundational Principles
Later Postmodernism Legal Thinkers
The first generation critical legal theorists
deconstructed traditional legal theory using principles of contradiction
and indeterminacy. Now, second generation critical theorists focus
on the way in which law defines and reproduces cultural values
in society. Legal scholar, Gary Minda explains:
"Second generation Critical Legal Studies
scholars seek to reveal how various legal categories are constructed
by judges and legislatures from cultural and political contexts
[i.e., biases] . . . Advancing a social-construction thesis, crits
attempted to show how legal meaning about the world 'comes from
within' the interpreting subject and is itself constituted by
an external and social cultural environment."
Femme-Crits
Leslie Bender explains the thinking behind feminist
critical legal theorists, or "Femme-Crits" as they are
known in legal circles.
"Men have created and named a world in which
men have power over women--physical power, political power,
opportunity power, silencing power. We must learn how our social
and political organizations have been constructed by men in
their own image and explore how a world constructed by women
and men for woman and men would be different . . .
The primary task of feminist scholars is to awaken women and men
to the insidious ways in which patriarchy distorts all of our
lives . . . Unearthing each shard of patriarchy is especially
difficult because of the powerful assumptions embedded in our
language and logic. Western culture teaches us that the patriarchal
description of reality is not biased but neutral; that our knowledge
and truths are not subjective. . . but objective, scientifically
based, and universal . . ."
But the femme-crits will help us understand how
all our western views are really just patriarchal theater.
Race-Crits
Angela Harris explains how the same postmodern
ideas apply to race-oriented Critical Legal Students, or "race-crits,"
as Gary Minda calls them:
"For race crits, racism is not only a matter
of individual prejudice and everyday practice, rather race is
deeply imbedded in language, perceptions, and perhaps even
'reason' itself. In CRT's [Critical Race Theory's] 'postmodern
narratives,' racism is an inescapable feature of western culture,
and race is always already inscribed in the most innocent and
neutral-seeming concepts. Even ideas like 'truth' and 'justice'
themselves are open to interrogations that reveal their complicity
with power . . .
Long ago, empowered actors and speakers enshrined their meanings,
preferences, and views of the world into the common culture and
language. Now, deliberation within that language, purporting always
to be neutral and fair, inexorably produces results that reflect
their interests."
Remember, these are not a lunatic fringe at the
margins of legal practice. They include department heads, and
leading professors at law schools like Harvard Law! They are practicing
lawyers and legal authorities, like Lani Guinier, who recently
attracted attention when she was nominated to be the attorney
general before withdrawing.
The Rest of the Story
Read The Death of Truth and learn:
- How postmodern theories are already affecting
legislation and court decisions in one state after another.
- What the postmodern legal theorists are saying
in their own words, and what they propose to do
- How tolerance laws, diversity training,
and behavior codes in companies, institutions and state
and federal legal codes reflect the success of postmodern theorists
Copyright © 1996 Xenos Christian Fellowship.
All Rights Reserved.
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