Robert Cover
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Robert M. Cover (July 30, 1943July 18, 1986) was an American law professor, scholar, and activist. He taught at
Yale Law School Yale Law School (YLS) is the law school of Yale University, a Private university, private research university in New Haven, Connecticut. It was established in 1824. The 2020–21 acceptance rate was 4%, the lowest of any law school in the United ...
from 1972 until his death at age 42 in 1986. Cover wrote on a number of subjects, including the relationship of violence to the law; the centrality of narrative to juridical structures, jurisgenerativity, and court decisions regarding slavery. Cover's interests were wide-ranging and included philosophy of law, baseball, Hebrew texts, and political affairs.


Biography

Robert M. Cover was born on July 30, 1943, in
Boston Boston is the capital and most populous city in the Commonwealth (U.S. state), Commonwealth of Massachusetts in the United States. The city serves as the cultural and Financial centre, financial center of New England, a region of the Northeas ...
, Massachusetts. Cover attended
Princeton University Princeton University is a private university, private Ivy League research university in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. Founded in 1746 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Elizabeth as the College of New Jersey, Princeton is the List of Colonial ...
and
Columbia Law School Columbia Law School (CLS) is the Law school in the United States, law school of Columbia University, a Private university, private Ivy League university in New York City. The school was founded in 1858 as the Columbia College Law School. The un ...
, from which he graduated in 1968, subsequently becoming a law professor there until 1971, when he moved to Yale Law School. In 1981, he received a Guggenheim Fellowship for his research on the Supreme Court and American ideology. Cover died on July 18, 1986, at Middlesex Memorial Hospital in
Middletown, Connecticut Middletown is a city in Middlesex County, Connecticut, United States. Located along the Connecticut River, in the central part of the state, 16 miles (25.749504 km) south of Hartford, Connecticut, Hartford. Middletown is the largest city in the L ...
, from a heart attack. Surviving family members included his wife Diane; his son Avidan, a professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law; his daughter Leah; and his brother Arnold. He lent his strong support to the campaign to divest Yale of apartheid South African financial holdings. He was also interested in Jewish social and legal history, and at the time of his death he was translating a Renaissance Hebrew text on the law of jurisdiction.


Work


Nomos and Narrative

In "Nomos and Narrative", he tells that "''we inhabit a 'nomos' — a normative universe. We constantly create and maintain a world of right and wrong, of lawful and unlawful, of valid and void''". He explains that the normative universe is held together by the force of interpretive commitments — some small and private, others immense and public. These commitments — of officials and of others — determine what law means and what law shall be. If there existed two legal orders with identical legal precepts and identical, predictable patterns of public force, they would nonetheless differ essentially in meaning if, in one of the orders, the precepts were universally venerated while in the other they were regarded by many as fundamentally unjust. From this it follows, that ...
the rules and principles of justice, the formal institutions of the law, and the conventions of a social order are, indeed, important to that world; they are, however, but a small part of the normative universe that ought to claim our attention. No set of legal institutions or prescriptions exists apart from the narratives that locate it and give it meaning. For every constitution there is an epic, for each decalogue a scripture. Once understood in the context of the narratives that give it meaning, law becomes not merely a system of rules to be observed, but a world in which we live.


Violence and the Word

In his most famous article, "Violence and the Word", he writes that
"Legal interpretation takes place in a field of pain and death. This is true in several senses. Legal interpretive acts signal and occasion the imposition of violence upon others: A judge articulates her understanding of a text, and as a result, somebody loses his freedom, his property, his children, even his life. Interpretations in law also constitute justifications for violence which has already occurred or which is about to occur. When interpreters have finished their work, they frequently leave behind victims whose lives have been torn apart by these organized, social practices of violence. Neither legal interpretation nor the violence it occasions may be properly understood apart from one another";
He concludes:
"The perpetrator and victim of organized violence will undergo achingly disparate significant experiences. For the perpetrator, the pain and fear are remote, unreal, and largely unshared. They are, therefore, almost never made a part of the interpretive artifact, such as the judicial opinion. On the other hand, for those who impose the violence the justification is important, real and carefully cultivated. Conversely, for the victim, the justification for the violence recedes in reality and significance in proportion to the overwhelming reality of the pain and fear that is suffered. Between the idea and the reality of common meaning falls the shadow of the violence of law, itself".


Justice Accused: Antislavery and the Judicial Process

Examines how judges in the antebellum era who personally opposed slavery nevertheless decided cases in favor of slave masters. An example was
Herman Melville Herman Melville (Name change, born Melvill; August 1, 1819 – September 28, 1891) was an American novelist, short story writer, and poet of the American Renaissance (literature), American Renaissance period. Among his best-known works ar ...
's father-in-law, Lemuel Shaw.


On Baseball

He also published the brief "Your Law-Baseball Quiz" on the editorial page of ''The New York Times'' on April 5, 1979, comparing Supreme Court justices to baseball players. It proved influential among law students, leading to the adoption of many baseball-related metaphorical devices.


Bibliography


Books

* ''Justice Accused: Antislavery and the Judicial Process'' (1975) * ''The Structure of Procedure'' (1979) *''Narrative, Violence, and the Law: The Essays of Robert Cover'' (1995)


Articles (selected)

* ** A Hebrew translation was published by Shalem Press in 2012. * * * Cover, Robert M. (1988). "Bringing the Messiah Through the Law: A Case Study". ''Nomos''. 30: 201–217. ** A Hebrew translation was published by Shalem Press in 2012.


References


External links


Ecologies of Paideic Law: Environmental Law and Robert M. Cover's Jurisprudence of ʻʻNomos and Narrativesʼʼ
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cover, Robert 1943 births 1986 deaths Columbia Law School alumni Princeton University alumni Yale Law School faculty Lawyers from Boston 20th-century American Jews 20th-century American lawyers