Question from Lael Weinberger, attorney and history graduate student:
Professor Friedman began writing legal history without professional training as a historian. How does he feel that this impacted his career as a legal historian?
Answer from Lawrence:
Answer from Lawrence:
You're right, I have no professional training in legal history; or in history itself for that matter. One course in college. So I'm definitely an amateur. Sometimes I think this is an advantage. I'm on the outside looking in. Also, I don't have to write "history;" and a lot of my work isn't properly historical at all. If I had a position in a history department, that would be considered (quite rightly) peculiar.
But mostly lack of training is a disadvantage. The new legal historians have studied history, they know the literature, they think hard about methodology, they know the lingo, and they have a sharp historical sense. The younger scholars with joint degrees are doing wonderful work. I hope I've made a contribution; but perhaps it would have been more of a contribution if I knew more about what I was doing and why. It's hard not to feel sometimes like an impostor.