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Modernism and the meaning of corporate person

Author / Creator
Siraganian, Lisa, author
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Online
Summary

Long before the US Supreme Court announced that corporate persons freely "speak" with money in Citizens United volume Federal Election Commission (2010), they elaborated the legal fiction of Americ...

Long before the US Supreme Court announced that corporate persons freely "speak" with money in Citizens United volume Federal Election Commission (2010), they elaborated the legal fiction of American corporate personhood in Santa Clara volume Southern Pacific Railroad (1886). Yet endowing a non-human entity with certain rights exposed a fundamental philosophical question about the possibility of collective intention. That question extended beyond the law and became essential to modern American literature. This volume offers the first multidisciplinary intellectual history of this story of corporate personhood. 0The possibility that large collective organizations might mean to act like us, like persons, animated a diverse set of American writers, artists, and theorists of the corporation in the first half of the twentieth century, stimulating a revolution of thought on intention. The ambiguous status of corporate intention provoked conflicting theories of meaning-on the relevance (or not) of authorial intention and the interpretation of collective signs or social forms-still debated today. As law0struggled with opposing arguments, modernist creative writers and artists grappled with interrelated questions, albeit under different guises and formal procedures. Combining legal analysis of law reviews, treatises, and case law with literary interpretation of short stories, novels, and poems, this volume analyzes legal philosophers including Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Frederic Maitland, Harold Laski, Maurice Wormser, and creative writers such as Theodore Dreiser, Muriel Rukeyser, Gertrude Stein, Charles Reznikoff, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and George Schuyler

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