| Reviews |
| - 'Outstanding biography. He deserves a perceptive biography, and Nicola LAcey has proided one.' - TLS
- 'For me, a biography addict, this is certainly the biography of 2004' - Baroness Warnock, The Times Higher Education Supplement
- 'impressive new biography' - Noel Malcolm, The Sunday Telegraph Review
- 'This is a stunning achievement. Nicola Lacey has thrown a wonderful light, not only on H.L.A. Hart, the man his life, his marriage, his war-work, his sexuality, his self-doubt, his experience of anti-Semitism but also on the Oxford of the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, and by extension the circle of friends in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in New York, in Jerusalem, and all over the world in whose
company he developed his ideas and made his massive contribution to jurisprudence.' - Jeremy Waldron, Maurice and Hilda Friedman Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Law and Philosophy, Columbia University
- 'The fascinating biography of a complex and brilliant man. Lacey's account vividly recreates the postwar Oxford climate in philosophy and jurisprudence, and paints Hart's life inside and outside the university
with sensitivity, wit, and authority.' - Simon Blackburn, Professor of Philosophy, University of Cambridge
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| Description | | - Sheds light on the genesis of Hart's ideas and the scale of his contribution to legal and political philosophy
- An intellectual history of trends in 20th century legal, social, philosophical, and political thought
- Hart's profound personal and professional doubts raise fascinating questions about the nature of intellectual creativity
| Herbert Lionel Adolphus Hart was born in Yorkshire in 1907 to second generation Jewish immigrants. Having won a scholarship to Oxford University, he went on to become the most famous legal philosopher of the twentieth century.
From 1932-40 H.L.A Hart practised as a barrister in London. He was pronounced physically unfit for military service in 1940, and was recruited by MI5, where he
worked until 1945. During his time at the Bar he had continued to study philosophy and at M15 his interest was further stimulated by his philosopher colleagues in M16, Stuart Hampshire and Gilbert Ryle. After the war, Hart returned to Oxford to take up a philosophy fellowship, later to become Professor of Jurisprudence.
H.L.A Hart single-handedly reinvented the philosophy of law and influenced
the nation's thinking in the 1960s on abortion, the legalization of homosexuality, and on capital punishment. Hart's approach to legal philosophy was at once disarmingly simple and breathtakingly ambitious, combining as it did the insights of Austin and Bentham and the new linguistic philosophy of J.L. Austin and Ludwig Wittgenstein. He sought to elucidate a concept of law which would be of
relevance to all forms of law, wherever or whenever they arose: his bestselling book, The Concept of Law, has sold tens of thousands of copies worldwide.
In 1941, he married Jenifer Williams (a high-ranking civil servant, later an Oxford academic) with whom he had four children. Their relationship was an enduring if unconventional one. In the early 1950s, Jenifer was rumoured to be having a
long-standing affair with Isaiah Berlin, one of Hart's closest friends. She was also, falsely, accused by the Sunday Times of having been a Russian spy, an allegation which was all the more scandalous given Hart's position at MI5 during the War.
Nicola Lacey draws on Hart's previously unpublished diaries and letters to reveal a complex inner life. Outwardly successful, Hart was in fact
tormented by doubts about his intellectual abilities, his sexual identity and his capacity to form close relationships. Her biography also sheds fascinating light on the origins of his ideas, and assesses his overall contribution. Above all, it chronicles of a life which had a depth ands impact far greater than many of Hart's readers have realized.
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Readership: Scholars of legal theory, jurisprudence, philosophy, and political theory, general readers with an interest in biography, social history, and Oxford.
| Contents |
List of illustrations
Acknowledgments
Biographer's Note on Approach and Sources
Introduction: An Outsider on the Inside
Part I: North and South
1: Harrogate, Cheltenham, Bradford
2: An Oxford Scholar
3: Success Snatched from Defeat: London and the Bar
Part II: Change and Continuity
4: Jenifer
5: From the Inns of Court to Military Intelligence: MI5, Marriage, and Fatherhood
6: Oxford from the Other Side of the Fence
Part III: The Golden Age
7: Selling Philosophy to the Lawyers: The Chair of Jurisprudence
8: American Jurisprudence through English Eyes: Harvard 1956-7
9: Law in the Perspective of Philosophy: Causation and the Law, The Concept of Law
10: West and East, California and Israel: Law, Liberty and Morality; Kelsen Visited; The Morality of the Criminal Law
11: Discipline, Punishment, and Responsibility
Part IV: After the Chair
12: Old Turks and Young Fogeys: Bentham and Brasenose
13: The Nightmare and the Noble Dream
Notes
Bibliography: HLA Hart
Bibliography: Other authors
List of Interviewees
Biographical details on figures appearing in the book
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| Authors, editors,
and contributors | Nicola Lacey, Professor of Criminal Law, London School of Economics; Adjunct Professor of Social and Political Theory, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University
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