Abstract
This brief book is a manifesto for a new kind of legal theory: cultural study of law and the rule of law in American experience. Heavily post-modern in orientation, style, and sources, Kahn draws from philosophical, traditionally legal, historical, and anthropological sources to illustrate the prospective benefits of this kind of cultural study. This work is a kind of prolegomenon to future work, substantially short of the comprehensive cultural study of American legal experience it proposes. At this level it is perhaps a success—and at the same time this book is deeply frustrating, because Kahn rarely draws out the implications of the fascinating suggestions he offers.