Search the full text of our books

Join Our Mailing List

Sign up and we'll keep you informed about new Press titles.

The Clay Sanskrit Library
Early American Places
The American Literatures Initiative
NYU Press
838 Broadway, 3rd Floor
New York, New York 10003
1-800-996-6987
Tel: 212-998-2575
Fax: 212-995-3833

Cloth: $55.00 $13.75
ISBN: 9780814793596
Release Date: 6/14/2004
320 pages






Critical America Series
Truth, Autonomy, and Speech
Feminist Theory and the First Amendment
Susan Williams

Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Titles 2005 Winner

Amidst the vast array of literature on the First Amendment, it is rare to hear a fresh voice speak about the First Amendment, but in Truth, Autonomy, and Speech, Susan H. Williams presents a strikingly original interpretation and defense of the First Amendment, written from a feminist perspective. Drawing on work from several disciplines—including law, political theory, philosophy, and anthropology—the book develops alternative accounts of truth and autonomy as the foundations for freedom of expression. Building on feminist understandings of self and the social world, Williams argues that both truth and autonomy are fundamentally relational.

With great clarity and insight, Williams demonstrates that speech is the means by which we create rather than discover truth and the primary mechanism through which we tell the stories that constitute our autonomy. She examines several controversial issues in the law of free speech—including campaign finance reform, the public forum doctrine, and symbolic speech—and concludes that the legal doctrine through which we interpret and apply the First Amendment should be organized to protect speech that serves the purposes of truth and autonomy.




SEARCH INSIDE THIS BOOK
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Susan H. Williams is the Walter W. Foskett Professor of Law at Indiana University School of Law–Bloomington.

Customers who bought this product also purchased
Seduced by Science
Seduced by Science
Feminist Legal Theory
Feminist Legal Theory
American Behavioral History
American Behavioral History
Shameless
Shameless