by Lawrence Rosen
Law is integral to culture, and culture to law. Often
considered a distinctive domain with strange rules and stranger language, law
is actually part of a culture's way of expressing its sense of the order of
things. In Law as Culture, Lawrence Rosen invites readers to consider how the
facts that are adduced in a legal forum connect to the ways in which facts are
constructed in other areas of everyday life, how the processes of legal
decision-making partake of the logic by which the culture as a whole is put
together, and how courts, mediators, or social pressures fashion a sense of the
world as consistent with common sense and social identity.
While the book explores issues comparatively, in each
instance it relates them to contemporary Western experience. The development of
the jury and Continental legal proceedings thus becomes a story of the
development of Western ideas of the person and time; African mediation
techniques become tests for the style and success of similar efforts in America
and Europe; the assertion that one's culture should be considered as an excuse
for a crime becomes a challenge to the relation of cultural norms and cultural
diversity.
Throughout the book, the reader is invited to approach
law afresh, as a realm that is integral to every culture and as a window into
the nature of culture itself.