Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr. - G. Edward White (essay date 1971)
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr. - G. Edward White (essay date 1971)
G. Edward White (essay date 1971)
SOURCE: "The Rise and Fall of Justice Holmes," in The University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 39, No. 1, Fall, 1971, pp. 51-77.
[In the following essay, White follows Holmes's image in America, from his extreme popularity to the later disillusionment about his ideals widely adopted after his death.]
Occasionally the American nation sees itself in the life of one of its citizens. Something about the experiences, background, attitudes, or accomplishments of an individual seems particularly evocative of American culture, or at least a vision thereof. Such a life was that of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. In addition to being a man of great popular appeal,1 Holmes has held considerable interest for the intellectual community. From the publication of Holmes's The Common Law in 1881 until the present day, legal scholars, philosophers, political scientists, historians, literary critics, and...
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Criticism
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (essay date 1896)
- H. L. Mencken (essay date 1930)
- Felix Frankfurter (essay date 1938)
- Daniel J. Boorstin (essay date 1941)
- John A. Garraty (essay date 1949)
- Irving Bernstein (essay date 1950)
- Mark DeWolfe Howe (essay date 1951)
- Saul K. Padover (essay date 1960)
- Francis Biddle (essay date 1961)
- Edmund Wilson (essay date 1962)
- G. Edward White (essay date 1971)
- G. Edward White (essay date 1976)
- Louis Auchincloss (essay date 1979)
- David H. Burton (essay date 1979)
- David H. Burton (essay date 1980)
- G. Edward White (essay date 1994)
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