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3L Fall / Law School / on the record

Edwards keeps it real.

Books and notepad at Library

Laura Edwards came to my Legal History Workshop class today to talk about her book, “The People and Their Peace: Legal Culture and the Transformation of Inequality in the Post-Revolutionary South.”

Edwards’ presentation was fascinating, which is typical for this semester’s workshops, but the best part of the workshop was the question-and-answer session:

Jill: “I wonder about the rights of white men who didn’t have property, you know, those who didn’t own land or slaves…the itinerant farmers…”
Edwards: “Yes. We call them ‘poor white trash’…”
Jill: “I WAS TRYING TO BE POLITICALLY CORRECT!”

Buhaha. Edwards keeps it real.

Other funny moments in today’s workshop were more about Edwards’ timing and inflection:

Edwards: “In South Carolina we had all these different ethnicities – Irish, French Catholic, French Protestant, Scott, English – and people traveling were amazed that these people got along because in Europe they shot at each other…”
Edwards: “At one point I thought I had six different cases, with six different defendants. But when I said the defendant’s name aloud I realized that I had six different spellings of a single defendant’s name! The problem was there was no standard spelling, and all these spellings depend on the speaker and writer – whether they were French, Irish, and well, no one could understand the Scottish! Not even the English…”

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