Gary Peller (born 1955) is a professor of law at Georgetown University Law Center and a prominent member of the critical legal studies and critical race theory movements.
Education and early career
Peller received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Emory University in 1977 and a Juris Doctor degree from Harvard Law School where he served as a member of the Harvard Law Review. Peller then clerked for Morris Lasker, a judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. He is currently a member of the Maryland state bar.
Academic work and influence
Peller was one of the central figures at the Conference on Critical Legal Studies. With Kimberlé Crenshaw, Peller co-authored a widely cited article, "The Contradictions of Mainstream Constitutional Theory", published in the UCLA Law Review, and co-edited one of the standard texts in critical race theory. Peller is among the irrationalist branch of the critical legal studies movement, arguing that there is no neutral or objective rationality but rather what is understood as knowledge is a socially contingent result of prevailing power dynamics. He is also known for his debate with Mark Tushnet where he defended the critical race theorists' use of personal narrative rather than conventional arguments in their articles.
Selected bibliography
- Gary Peller & Mark V. Tushnet, State Action and a New Birth of Freedom, 92 Geo. L.J. 779-817 (2004).
- Gary Peller, A Subversive Strand of the Warren Court, 59 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 1141-1165 (2002).
- Kimberle Crenshaw, Neil Gotanada, Gary Peller, Kendall Thomas, Critical Race Theory, The Key Writings that Formed the Movement. 1995, The New Press
- âÂÂThe Ideology of the Substantive Criminal Law,â Summer Faculty Colloquia, Georgetown University Law Center,â July, 2001.
- Kimberle Crenshaw & Gary Peller, The Contradictions of Mainstream Constitutional Theory,â 45 U.C.L.A. L. Rev. 1683 (1998).
- âÂÂPublic Imperialism and Private Resistance: Progressive Possibilities of the New Private Law,â 73 Denver L. Rev. 1001 (1996).
- âÂÂCultural Imperialism and Race,â in A. Sarat, ed., Forty Years After Brown, Oxford University Press (1996).
- âÂÂCriminal Law, Race, and the Idea of Bias: Transcending the Critical Tools of the Sixties,â 67 Tulane L. Rev. 2231 (1993).
- âÂÂProof, Myth and Law: The Social Meaning of the Rodney King Verdict,â 70 Denver L. Rev. 548 (1993) (co-authored with Kimberle Crenshaw).
- âÂÂThe Discourse of Constitutional Degradation,â 81 Georgetown L. J. 313 (1992).
- âÂÂNotes Toward a Postmodern Nationalism,â 72 Illin. L. Rev. 664 (1992).
- âÂÂThe New Public Law Movement: Moderation as a Postmodern Cultural Form,â 89 Michigan L. Rev. 231 (1991)
- âÂÂRace Consciousness,â 1990 Duke L.J. 758. Reprinted in After Identity, D. Danielson & K. Engle, eds., Routledge (1994) and in Critical Race Theory: A Reader (K. Crenshaw, N. Gotanda, G. Peller, & K. Thomas, eds. New Press (1996).
- âÂÂReason and the Mob: The Politics of Representation,â 2 Tikkun 28 (July/Aug. 1987). Reprinted in A Tikkun Anthology (M. Lerner, ed. 1991).
- âÂÂThe Metaphysics of American Law,â 73 Cal. L. Rev. 1151 (1985), reprinted in Critical Legal Studies, J. Boyle ed. (1991).
See also
Notes
External links