Against Constitutional Originalism: A Historical Critique
English
By (author): Jonathan Gienapp
A detailed and compelling examination of how the legal theory of originalism ignores and distorts the very constitutional history from which it derives interpretive authority
What are the chances that, in 2024, a new book could fundamentally reorient how we understand Americas founding? Jonathan Gienapp . . . has written such a book. . . . You read it, and you get vertigo. . . . Gienapps book comes as a thunderclap.Cass Sunstein, Washington Post
Constitutional originalism stakes law to history. The theorys core tenetthat the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted according to its original meaninghas us decide questions of modern constitutional law by consulting the distant constitutional past. Yet originalist engagement with history is often deeply problematic. And now that a majority of justices on the U.S. Supreme Court champion originalism, the task of scrutinizing originalists use and abuse of history has never been more urgent.
In this comprehensive and novel critique of originalism, Jonathan Gienapp targets originalists unspoken assumptions about the Constitution and its history. Originalists are committed to recovering the Constitution laid down at the American Founding, yet they often assume that the Constitution is fundamentally modern. Rather than recovering the original Constitution, they project their own understandings onto it, assuming that eighteenth-century constitutional thinking was no different than their own. They take for granted what it meant to write a constitution down, what law was, how it worked, and where it came from, and how a constitutions meaning was fixed. In the process, they erase the Constitution that eighteenth-century Americans in fact created. By understanding how originalism fails, we can better understand the Constitution that we have. See more
What are the chances that, in 2024, a new book could fundamentally reorient how we understand Americas founding? Jonathan Gienapp . . . has written such a book. . . . You read it, and you get vertigo. . . . Gienapps book comes as a thunderclap.Cass Sunstein, Washington Post
Constitutional originalism stakes law to history. The theorys core tenetthat the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted according to its original meaninghas us decide questions of modern constitutional law by consulting the distant constitutional past. Yet originalist engagement with history is often deeply problematic. And now that a majority of justices on the U.S. Supreme Court champion originalism, the task of scrutinizing originalists use and abuse of history has never been more urgent.
In this comprehensive and novel critique of originalism, Jonathan Gienapp targets originalists unspoken assumptions about the Constitution and its history. Originalists are committed to recovering the Constitution laid down at the American Founding, yet they often assume that the Constitution is fundamentally modern. Rather than recovering the original Constitution, they project their own understandings onto it, assuming that eighteenth-century constitutional thinking was no different than their own. They take for granted what it meant to write a constitution down, what law was, how it worked, and where it came from, and how a constitutions meaning was fixed. In the process, they erase the Constitution that eighteenth-century Americans in fact created. By understanding how originalism fails, we can better understand the Constitution that we have. See more
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€30.88
Original price
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Will deliver when available. Publication date 05 Nov 2024