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ChangingSocietyUsingWordsTalk 9 - 28 Mar 2009 - Main.LeslieHannay
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| We've tentatively defined lawyering as "making something change in society using words." I think about this a lot, both in and out of class. Obviously, there are many ways to make change in society using words; this is something not only good lawyers, but also good journalists and novelists do. For me, that raises the question: what can lawyers contribute to making social change that novelists and journalists can't? Does our usefulness lie in our knowledge of, and proximity to, structures of power?
I bring this up because the groundwork for many of the prominent social reforms of the last century seems to have been laid by other kinds of writers -- Rachel Carson and Upton Sinclair, for instance. In the realm of foreign policy, simply by showing people what was really going on, journalists helped turn American public opinion decisively against the Vietnam War. This seems to have impacted Vietnam policy, and foreign policy in general, far more effectively than lawyers ever could have. | | At the same time, Leslie, using simple and concise language is often considered to be mark of an effective attorney from a trial advocacy perspective. Attorneys in trial practice are usually instructed to abandon their formalistic, overly-precise lawyerspeak to better make things happen for their side. I'd imagine lawyers attempting to communicate with the general public would adopt a similar strategy.
-- MolissaFarber - 26 Mar 2009 | |
> > | using simple and concise language is often considered to be mark of an effective attorney
Yes, that is what I meant by "precise" - if "precise" may be taken to connote "turgid, hyper-technical, or inaccessible to a lay audience," I was not aware of it and did not intend that meaning.
-- LeslieHannay - 28 Mar 2009 |
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