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Louis D. Brandeis: Justice for the People [Hardcover]

Philippa Strum (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

May 31, 1984

Louis D. Brandeis (1856-1941) played a role in almost every important social and economic movement during his long life: trade unionism, trust busting, progressivism, woman suffrage, scientific management, expansion of civil liberties, hours, wages, and unemployment legislation, Wilson's New Freedom, Roosevelt's New Deal. He invented savings bank life insurance and the preferential union shop, became known as the "People's Attorney," and altered American jurisprudence as a lawyer and Supreme Court judge. Brandeis led American Zionism from 1914 through 1921 and again from 1930 until his death. He earned over two million dollars practicing law between 1878 and 1916 and used his wealth to foster public causes. He was adviser to leaders from Robert La Follette to Frances Perkins, William McAdoo to Franklin Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson to Harry Truman.

This lively account of Brandeis's life and legacy, based on ten years of research in sources not available to previous biographers, reveals much that is new and gives fuller context to personal and historical events. The most significant revelations have to do with his intellectual development. That Brandeis opposed political and economic "bigness" and excessive concentration of wealth is well known. What was not known prior to Strum's research is how far Brandeis carried his beliefs, becoming committed to the goals of worker participation--the sharing of profits and decision making by workers in "manageable"-sized firms. So it happened that the man who was sometimes dismissed as an outmoded horse-and-buggy liberal championed a cause too radical even for the New Deal braintrusters who were quick to follow his advice in other areas

Strum charts Brandeis's development as a kind of industrial-era Jeffersonian deeply influenced by the classical ideals of Periclean Athens. She shows that this was the source not only of his vision of a democracy based on a human-scaled polis, but also of his sudden emergence, in his late fifties, as the leading American Zionist: he had come to regard Palestine as the locus of a new Athens. And later, on the Supreme Court, this Athenian conception of human potential took justice Brandeis beyond even Justice Holmes in the determined use of judicial power to protect civil liberties and democracy in an industrialized society.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

A truly distinguished work on Brandeis that at last will portray the man in all his magnificent range and versatility, as well as his humanity and intellectual qualities... A major contribution to American biography and history... Strum has obviously written this from her heart as well as from her head, and the combination of approaches, so peculiarly appropriate for Brandeis, gives a sense of vitality and consequence to almost every page of the book. I expect it will take its place as the major work on Brandeis for years to come. (James MacGregor Burns )

About the Author

Philippa Strum is Professor of Political Science, City University of New York, and a Vice-President of the American Civil Liberties Union

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 536 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press (May 31, 1984)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674539214
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674539211
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.5 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,541,341 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An interesting subject presented somewhat dryly, July 20, 2007
By 
trainreader (Montclair, N.J.) - See all my reviews
Louis Brandeis, law student and lawyer extraordinaire, advisor to a number of Presidents (especially Woodrow Wilson) and one of our greatest most visionary Supreme Court Justices, makes for the subject of a compelling biography. As we learn from Phillip Strum, here was a man who was already considered to be a genuis when he attended Harvard Law School, and graduated number one in the class at a younger age than anyone else. He went on to fame and fortune as an attorney, by devouring information regarding the matter at hand (assisted by his near photographic memory), and truly believing that with logic and persuasion, any conflict could be resolved. He invented the "Brandeis Brief," in which he would go far beyond the usual four corners to which lawyers normally confine themselves, by discussing sociological and other concerns beyond the traditional law. One of his core beliefs was that state and local governments should be given free reign to "experiment" for the common good. Whether it was about the insurance industry, railroads, or management-labor disputes, Brandeis despised monopolies and big corporations, and felt that the state and local governments could and should discourage them, and find ways for smaller businesses to thrive. Brandeis' credo was basically that the common man had extraordinary potential if society would only foster same, but limitations as well, especially when attempting to run a large company that could not mutually benefit management and labor.

Later on in life, he became an ardent supporter and important figure in the Zionist movement, and almost single-handedly convinced skeptical prominant American Jews to support the cause. As a Supreme Court Justice, he and his close friend, Oliver Wendell Holmes, would often dissent from opinions in which the majority would strike down governmental attempts to regulate business and property, and improve society's lot. However, during FDR's presidency, the Holmes/Brandeis position became the majority.

While it is certainly difficult to capture the breadth of Brandeis' life in a signal volume of managable length, Phillipa Strum does an admirable job here. However, I have to say that Strum often spends too much time on subjects that I, quite frankly, found exceptionally dry, such as insurance and railroad disputes. On the other hand, I felt that the section on Brandeis as a Supreme Court Justice felt rushed and unsatisfying. In the end, the persona of Louis Brandeis remained elusive, as if one can really never get to know him (albeit this might have been intentional). Further, Strum provides little context of the contemporary political issues in America, and the impact that the Holmes/Brandeis dissents (which laid the foundation of later majority decisions and was vital to Roosevelt's "New Deal"), impacted on society.

Still, for anyone interested in the life of this great man, I can recommend this book, but it takes a bit of effort to stick with it.
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