Law and Literature: The Legal and Moral Issues of Our Time
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3 comment(s)
3/28/2012 6:43:18 PM
samantha ferguson wrote:

could you please email me and give me permission to use your work in a research paper i am doing? ill need your name if that is ok
6/28/2011 3:01:00 AM
Sherry wrote:

Oops! I forgot to include my email address with my previous comment. Please use it to contact me regarding gaining permission to use your articles.
One last comment: I firmly believe that To Kill a Mockingbird should be required reading for law students. The majority of high school graduates today have never read--or even heard of--it. There's a reason that this article has a section headed "Lawyers and Morals: Oxymoron?", and including TKAM as required law school reading certainly couldn't hurt.
6/28/2011 2:49:02 AM
Sherry wrote:

Thank you for this article. It would make a compelling addition to any literary study of To Kill a Mockingbird, particularly in public school classrooms located in rural areas where this type of prejudice still continues (and I speak from experience). One sentence that especially spoke to me is that "A different time frame and a new zip code could change the definition of 'innocence'" . . . what a powerful statement.
As a teacher, I would highly recommend this for inclusion in classes 7th grade and up, with the best target audience probably being ages 13-16. Can you please tell me how to get permission to use your articles in the classroom?

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