David
Schorr recently invited me to share a few words about my latest video project
with the readers of this blog. The video will be called “Wood, Water, Stone,
Sky, Milk: Law and Landscape in Austria.” It will run about ninety minutes once
it’s complete, but in the meantime I’ve been releasing short draft segments, one of which was cross-posted here a few weeks back.
The
latest segment is called “Alexander and Iris Talk About Stone (without meeting),”
and it explores an Austrian legal method beguilingly named after one of the most
prominent elements of the Austrian landscape:
The
project grows out seven months I spent as a Fulbright Scholar at the University
of Salzburg in 2015, but its roots lie a bit further back. In 2012, I began an
extended, unpaid leave of absence from Rutgers-Newark School of Law, where I
had taught constitutional law and legal history for ten years. The reasons for
the change were personal: my wife is a professor of English
at Wesleyan University, and the burdens of my commute from New Haven came to
outweigh the benefits of an academic career. We value our lives together.
The decision
came with some significant material costs, but it has given me the time and freedom
to strike out in new directions, and that’s been ever-inspiring. I had already
published three books, and
I wanted to jump well outside my comfort zone and explore modes of historical
expression that were entirely new to me. I wanted to engage with radically different
forms and styles of telling stories about the legal past. As it happened, two of
the forms that came to interest me—two new directions I took—were visual.
The
first new direction led me into the world of museum exhibitions. Most
important, I began collaborating with my friend Mike Widener, Rare Book
Librarian at Yale Law School, on an exhibition
for the Grolier Club in New York about
illustrated law books. Called “Law’s Picture Books,” the exhibition will
feature a number of works that are sure to interest readers of this blog, like this
eighteenth-century book about Dutch water law, or this
great edition of Bartolus. Do come join us when the exhibition opens in February
2018—it’s going to be exciting.
The
second new direction led me into the world of video production and editing,
which has become one of the most profound humanistic experiences of my life—it
forced me to wrestle with basic questions about our knowledge of the world.
I’ll find another occasion to reflect on the challenges involved when a
university scholar tries to learn digital video from scratch. But I can say
here that, to my relief, it struck me immediately that the storytelling
foundations of documentary work and my own academic writing were basically the
same. And, happily, after a couple of years of trial-and-error learning, I’ve
become familiar enough with Adobe’s suite of post-production
products—storytelling tools of jaw-dropping power for historians—to create work
that’s significantly better than the first film I made on my Flip Video camera.
Plus, the great thing about being a beginner again is there’s so much
opportunity to learn so much more.
“Wood,
Water, Stone, Sky, Milk”—or, when I’m feeling less ambitious, “Stone, Water,
and Wood”—began as a very different video project. When I put together my
Fulbright proposal, I intended to make a film about the Austrian legal
philosopher Hans Kelsen and his pure theory of law.
This seemed like a project just quixotic enough to be interesting to me. But
after spending a series of afternoons meditating on Kelsen along the banks of
the beautiful Salzach river, it became clear that any filmic treatment of
Kelsen would after all have to be a film.
That is, it would require exploring his highly abstract thought in a way
that would be grounded in—indeed, that would proceed from—worldly, visual metaphors.
It also became clear that the project was too narrowly conceived.
And
so as I sat holding my dog-eared copy of the General Theory of Law and State and thinking about concrete things
in the world around me that, like Kelsen’s theory, were “pure,” I looked out on
the crystal river in front of me … and a structure for a much larger film fell quickly
into place. My wife and I had spent many weeks hiking and biking through the mountains
and countryside around Salzburg. The landscape we experienced consisted of some
basic elements, again and again—features that seemed fundamental to the
Austrian environment: the wood of its
forests; the water of its rivers and lakes
and melting snow; the stone of its
mountains and rocks, pushed up by the meeting of the African and European tectonic
plates; the bright sky spanning its
valleys; and the lush agriculture and animal husbandry of the milk production we saw emerge as winter
turned to spring.
How
was this Austrian landscape, I wondered, the product of legal regulation—and
years of legal development—that was characteristically Austrian? How was it a
landscape of law and legal history? At the same time, in what way could the
basic features of this landscape serve as useful metaphors for characteristic
doctrines of the country’s legal system?
I
suspected that exploring how Austria has regulated its landscape through law would
reveal a pattern in which a robust, relatively distant administrative state
forcefully protected public goods through a resistance to market
liberalization—a pattern that could be understood in part as an inheritance of
the legal principles of monarchy and as an expression of the desire for
“security” that Stefan Zweig explores in Die
Welt von Gestern. This pattern, I also suspected, was sure to be under
pressure through the forces of EU enlargement and centralization and economic
globalization.
The
landscape metaphors also came easily: “wood” for the tradition of careful
statutory construction that partly was an inheritance of Enlightenment
absolutism; “water” for Kelsen’s pure theory of law or, perhaps, for Austrian
state neutrality after 1955; “stone” for the Versteinerungstheorie, the “en-stoning” principle of federalist
jurisprudence; “sky” for Austria’s special treatment of religion, and for its
conservatism; and “milk” as a metaphor for the post-war welfare state—again, each
principle sounding in Zweig’s meditations on Austrian Sicherheit.
My
hope was to interview a wide variety of Austrians who could speak meaningfully about
the legal regulation and history of one of the five basic landscape elements I
had chosen, and to conduct those interviews within the same natural environment
on which they would be meditating for the camera.
For
the past few weeks, I’ve been gathering together the footage I shot for the
“Stone” section of the film, and so far, I’m intrigued by the way the segments work
together. The originalist method of interpretation Somek and Murer discuss in
“Alexander and Iris Talk About Stone” has interesting echoes in the legal
traditionalism explored in “Anna in the Mine” (which is about the regulation of salt mining). Both touch upon
themes addressed in another video segment, “Marc of Lucky Town,” in which an
Austrian law student who is the son and grandson of coal miners shows me where
he grew up (I’m awaiting copyright permission for an music track, so I can’t
yet share the segment). And all three segments play in interesting ways off the
ideals and apprehensions about the Austrian landscape of law raised in this
interview with the archivist of the Salzburg folk song society:
Likewise,
these segments on stone speak to some of the themes raised in the following
footage about the history of Austrian forest law and administration, which I’ll
be incorporating into the section on “Wood.” Note that the footage hasn’t been
edited for color or sound correction (later I’ll be removing the sound of those
screaming aristocratic peacocks at the end of the clip):
Next
up, I’m turning to the “Water” section of the film, beginning with an interview
with a scholar of Austrian water law conducted on the banks of the Wolfgangsee.
We’ll see where it all goes. I’m certainly enjoying the process and learning a lot
about Austria and its legal tradition of environmental regulation. And I’m learning a lot, too, about how to
tell stories about legal history in the digital age. It turns out, wonderfully,
that the natural world is not only a vital subject for that project. It’s also a invaluable aesthetic resource.
Thanks very much!
ReplyDeleteThis is one of the most important blogs that I have seen, keep it up!blog outreach services
ReplyDelete