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- W2326202335 abstract "We make lots of things into texts these days (movies, conversation, dreams) in order to bring them into our discussions. The hope is that something is gained. Here we have a public speech that has become an essay. I hope we don't lose too much in treating it that way. In addressing the written text of Santos's Three Metaphors .. . (1995), I would like to recall the speech of which the text is a part. The speech took place in a large and fabulously ornate room in the Royal York Hotel in Toronto.1 It was a luncheon speech presented to gathered scholars who had, as I recall, just completed a chicken salad plate and run through a series of awards. The speech came near the end of the 1995 Annual Meeting of the Law and Society Association. Such an occasion is a classic in the practices of associations, which use them to build collective identities from the myriad smaller and more typical performances, in our case, the panel sessions. Luncheon speeches are somewhat uncharacteristic of the Law and Society Association. Although the luncheon is always done beautifully, it is a more formal event than sociolegal studies scholars are accustomed to-being Realists and all. This is an association that had a journal years before it decided to constitute a membership and meet face to face. We know ourselves as taking our marginality in legal scholarship as an honor. Most of us think of status-conferring ceremonies as things the people we study do. I always find it a little odd to look up from an uncleared table to the dais for inspiration, but I love these occasions for their aspiration. We are constituted as a group, and it is to the ongoing requirements of the constitutive function2 that the Santos speech makes its contribution." @default.
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- W2326202335 date "1995-01-01" @default.
- W2326202335 modified "2023-10-14" @default.
- W2326202335 title "The Challenge of the South: Comment" @default.
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- W2326202335 doi "https://doi.org/10.2307/3053911" @default.
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