Reviews:
“[In] Rights
Talk: The Impoverishment of Political Discourse (1991), where she
describes the political consequences of contemporary legal liberalism
and its hyper-individualism, [Glendon] has provided perhaps the most
comprehensive look at the relationship between law, culture and American
democracy since Tocqueville.”
--Cornell W. Clayton, The Law and Politics Book Review
Here, Harvard Law School professor Glendon argues eloquently
and persuasively that modern American political discourse, by emphasizing
an ever-expanding catalogue of rights to the exclusion of duties and
responsibilities, has lost the central role in civic life envisioned
for it by the Founding Fathers. Glendon shows that, in American society,
both sides in political debates frame issues in terms of individual
rights--flag- burning, domestic relations, and human reproduction, for
example- -and that this tendency impedes understanding and compromise.
Such stark formulations, she says, ultimately lead to coerced, and often
unsatisfying, social arrangements. Glendon makes a compelling case that
the American political lexicon lacks a vocabulary for expressing normative
and moral concepts that individual Americans understand and value highly,
and that the legal culture, with its single-minded emphasis on obtaining
civil rights (as opposed to cultivating moral norms), has actually contributed,
albeit unwittingly, to the debasement of American political and legal
discourse. Glendon calls for the inclusion of the ``missing language
of responsibility'' and the ``missing language of sociality'' in American
political dialogue, and for an increasing emphasis on individuals' responsibilities
to their communities as a necessary concomitant to the rights they exercise.
A forceful and valuable analysis of the banality of modern American
public debate.
--Kirkus Reviews