Abstract
This article describes how I discovered the power of story as a tool to inspire scholarship. We think of stories as a means to bring life to legal cases in a way that grounds them and makes them visceral and comprehensible. We use storytelling to teach our students - showing how the emotive power of a story can persuade. However, stories can also serve a different function. In my search for a way to inspire and sustain my own writing, I found out that a good story can be the source of a writer’s motivation to both create and sustain scholarship. Basing scholarship on a story essentially mimics the process that has been occurring all along in the formation of law. The common law develops and changes as new stories push the limits of existing rules. Thus, stories are natural and logical fodder for scholarship about current trends and doctrines.
Publication Date
1-1-2011
Journal Title
Legal Rhetoric & Communication: JAWLD
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Amy Vorenberg, "The Moral of the Story: The Power of Narrative to Inspire and Sustain Scholarship," 8 LEGAL COMM. & RHETORIC: JAWLD 257 (2011).
Included in
Juvenile Law Commons, Law and Society Commons, Legal Writing and Research Commons, Nonfiction Commons
Additional Information
Abstract available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1933789