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- catalog abstract "How do lawyers sway jurors in the heat of a trial? Why do the best trial lawyers seem uncannily able to get the verdict they want? In addressing these questions, folklorist Sam Schrager validates - with a twist - the widespread belief that lawyers are actors who manipulate the truth. Schrager shows that attorneys have no choice but to treat the jury trial as an artful performance, as storytelling combat in which victory most often goes to the lawyer with superior control of craft. Read about the performance styles of some of the nation's most artful criminal and civil advocates - including litigating stars from around the country, such as Roy Barrera, Penny Cooper, Jo Ann Harris, Tony Serra, and Michael Tigar - and from Philadelphia, prosecutor Roger King, defender Robert Mozenter, and the legendary Cecil B. Moore.".
- catalog contributor b11225751.
- catalog created "1999.".
- catalog date "1999".
- catalog date "1999.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1999.".
- catalog description "How do lawyers sway jurors in the heat of a trial? Why do the best trial lawyers seem uncannily able to get the verdict they want? In addressing these questions, folklorist Sam Schrager validates - with a twist - the widespread belief that lawyers are actors who manipulate the truth. Schrager shows that attorneys have no choice but to treat the jury trial as an artful performance, as storytelling combat in which victory most often goes to the lawyer with superior control of craft. Read about the performance styles of some of the nation's most artful criminal and civil advocates - including litigating stars from around the country, such as Roy Barrera, Penny Cooper, Jo Ann Harris, Tony Serra, and Michael Tigar - and from Philadelphia, prosecutor Roger King, defender Robert Mozenter, and the legendary Cecil B. Moore.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 235-240) and index.".
- catalog description "Introduction: A Storytelling Craft -- Drama -- Two Decisive Hours -- Momentum -- Nailing Things Down -- Style -- The Trial -- Poetics of Identification -- Repertoires -- Strains in Performance -- Interlude: A Legendary Lawyer -- Identity -- Sources of Emotion -- Local Inflections -- Gendered Plotlines -- A Mix of Class, Gender, and Race -- Deception and Truth -- The Client -- The Jury -- The Judge -- The Expert -- The Lawyer -- Conclusion: In the Service of ... -- The Framers and Original Intent -- President and Congress: Foreign Policy and War Powers -- Judicial Review and Judicial Activism -- Marbury v. Madison: Judicial Activism Run Amok -- Was Judicial Review Intended? The State Precedents -- Development of Judicial Review -- The Contract Clause -- Why We Have the Bill of Rights -- The First Amendment: The Establishment Clause -- The First Amendment: The Free Press Clause -- The Fourth Amendment: Search and Seizure -- The Fifth Amendment: The Right Against Self-Incrimination -- The Ninth Amendment: Unenumerated Rights -- History and Original Intent -- A Constitutional Jurisprudence of Original Intent? Part One -- A Constitutional Jurisprudence of Original Intent? Part Two.".
- catalog extent "xiii, 245 p. :".
- catalog identifier "1566396735 (cloth : alk. paper)".
- catalog issued "1999".
- catalog issued "1999.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Philadelphia : Temple University Press,".
- catalog spatial "United States.".
- catalog subject "347.73/75 21".
- catalog subject "Forensic oratory.".
- catalog subject "KF8915 .S263 1999".
- catalog subject "Persuasion (Rhetoric)".
- catalog subject "Trial practice United States.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction: A Storytelling Craft -- Drama -- Two Decisive Hours -- Momentum -- Nailing Things Down -- Style -- The Trial -- Poetics of Identification -- Repertoires -- Strains in Performance -- Interlude: A Legendary Lawyer -- Identity -- Sources of Emotion -- Local Inflections -- Gendered Plotlines -- A Mix of Class, Gender, and Race -- Deception and Truth -- The Client -- The Jury -- The Judge -- The Expert -- The Lawyer -- Conclusion: In the Service of ... -- The Framers and Original Intent -- President and Congress: Foreign Policy and War Powers -- Judicial Review and Judicial Activism -- Marbury v. Madison: Judicial Activism Run Amok -- Was Judicial Review Intended? The State Precedents -- Development of Judicial Review -- The Contract Clause -- Why We Have the Bill of Rights -- The First Amendment: The Establishment Clause -- The First Amendment: The Free Press Clause -- The Fourth Amendment: Search and Seizure -- The Fifth Amendment: The Right Against Self-Incrimination -- The Ninth Amendment: Unenumerated Rights -- History and Original Intent -- A Constitutional Jurisprudence of Original Intent? Part One -- A Constitutional Jurisprudence of Original Intent? Part Two.".
- catalog title "The trial lawyer's art / Sam Schrager.".
- catalog type "text".