Description
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. has been, and continues to be, praised as Americas greatest judge and he is widely considered to have done more than anyone else to breathe life into the Constitutions right of free speech, probably the most crucial right for democracy. One indeed finds among professors of constitutional law and federal judges the widespread belief that the scope of the First Amendment owes much of its incredible expansion over the last sixty years to Holmess judicial dissents in
Abrams and
Gitlow. In this book, John M. Kang offers the novel thesis that Holmess dissenting opinions in
Abrams and
Gitlow drew in part from a normative worldview structured by an idiosyncratic manliness, a manliness which was itself rooted in physical courage. In making this argument, Kang seeks to show how Holmess justification for the right of speech was a bid to proffer a philosophical commentary about the demands of democracy.