LC control no. | n 83187328 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | White, James Boyd, 1938- |
Variant(s) | White, James B., 1938- White, James B. (James Boyd), 1938- |
Other standard no. | 000000011079077X |
Birth date | 1938 |
Field of activity | Law and literature Law--Language |
Affiliation | University of Michigan |
Profession or occupation | Law teachers College teachers Scholars Philosophers |
Special note | URIs added to this record for the PCC URI MARC Pilot. Please do not remove or edit the URIs. |
Found in | When words lose their meaning, 1983: CIP t.p. (James Boyd White) LC data base, 6-22-83 (hdg.: White, James B., 1938- ; usage: James B. White) How should we talk about religion?, c2001: t.p. (James Boyd White; Hart Wright professor of law and professor of English at University of Michigan, Ann Arbor) p. 28 (graduate of Amherst Coll., Harvard Law Sch., Harvard Grad. Sch. (M.A., English)) Wikipedia, viewed Jan. 23, 2019 (James Boyd White, born 1938; American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher; generally credited with founding the "Law and Literature" movement; the preeminent proponent of the analysis of constitutive rhetoric in the analysis of legal texts; graduated with a B.A. in classics at Amherst College in 1960; earned an M.A. in English literature from Harvard University in 1961, and an LL.B. from the Harvard Law School in 1964; has been at the University of Michigan Law School since 1983 and there is the L. Hart Wright professor of law, professor of English and adjunct professor of classics) <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Boyd_White> |