One might think that the market for treatments of the life and legacy
of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg would be saturated by now. The past
three years alone have seen the release of a carefully curated
collection of the justice’s writings, “My Own Words,” a surprise hit
documentary about her life and career, “RBG,” and a recent feature film,
“On the Basis of Sex,” which focuses on the first sex-discrimination
case Ginsburg argued in federal court. Now comes “Ruth Bader Ginsburg: A Life,”
by Jane Sherron De Hart, a retired professor of history at the
University of California, Santa Barbara. This book began as a research
project examining Ginsburg’s early career as a women’s-rights litigator
at the American Civil Liberties Union, and it expanded into a
full-length biography (540 pages of text and 110 pages of footnotes).
Ginsburg spoke at length to the author during the early, limited part
of the project, but she curtailed her cooperation later, likely because
an authorized biography was (and remains) in the works. Whether because
of De Hart’s own initial interest or the benefits of consultation with
Ginsburg, the book is strongest when it focuses on Ginsburg’s early life
and her work before her appointment to the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. Readers will meet straight-A
student and Brooklyn baton-twirler “Kiki” Bader, whose mother Celia died
of cancer two days before Kiki’s high-school graduation. They will
shake their heads at the notion that Ginsburg, although graduating at
the top of her class from Columbia Law School, was offered a clerkship
with a federal judge only after her law professor Gerald Gunther offered
to substitute another (presumably male) candidate if Ginsburg did not
pan out. And they will be touched by Ginsburg’s enduring partnership
with her husband, Marty, who, as Ginsburg has said, “believed in me more
than I believed in myself.”
Some of De Hart’s most valuable insights come in her account of how
Ginsburg, who, in an effort “not [to] be considered confrontational,”
responded to Harvard Law School Dean Erwin Griswold’s query about why
she was occupying a place in the first-year class that could have gone
to a man by saying it was important for her to “understand her husband’s
work,” came to espouse women’s rights so whole-heartedly. De Hart
traces some through lines that help explain how Ginsburg developed the
ideas of equality that informed her determination to secure equal
treatment for women under the law. Notable among these was a fortuitous
sojourn in Sweden to research Swedish civil procedure. Ginsburg was
struck by “the greater gender equality Swedes enjoyed” and by Swedish
theorists’ and social scientists’ contention that “culturally
constructed roles – stereotypical assumptions about the proper role of
men and women – imposed constraints on both sexes that penalized
individuals and impoverished society.”
Ginsburg’s experiences in Sweden, coupled with the sexism she had
experienced and the influence of feminist writers like Simone de
Beauvoir, prompted her to helm the ACLU’s new Women’s Rights Project.
Her analytical tenacity, single-minded focus on work, meticulous
planning, and uncompromisingly high standards enabled her to devise and
carry out her goals successfully. De Hart offers detailed accounts of
the series of cases through which Ginsburg succeeded in persuading the
Supreme Court to raise the standard of review for laws that treated men
and women differently based on damaging stereotypes about gender roles.
She observes, as have others before her, that Ginsburg’s incremental
approach – building in small steps on early cases with sympathetic
plaintiffs, often men – was modeled on Justice Thurgood Marshall’s
strategy of combating racial discrimination as a litigator for the
NAACP. But she also highlights the pitfalls of equating gender
discrimination with racial discrimination, particularly as an
increasingly conservative Supreme Court began to insist on a “color
blind” approach to the Constitution that subjected affirmative action
programs to strict scrutiny.
Readers familiar with the pop-culture trope of Ginsburg as a fearless
champion of liberal ideals may be surprised by De Hart’s reminder that
the justice’s nomination was almost forestalled by her criticism of Roe v. Wade,
which she publicly suggested may have done abortion rights a disservice
by, among other things, leapfrogging legislative change and prompting a
powerful political backlash. De Hart exposes the rifts within the
feminist movement that led President Bill Clinton to respond, when
Ginsburg’s name was first floated, that “the women are against her.”
De Hart’s account of Ginsburg’s years on the Supreme Court, though
detailed and methodical, is less compelling, perhaps because De Hart had
to rely on oral argument transcripts and opinions instead of interviews
and the contemporaneous documents of the justices, most of which are
not publicly available. Also evident in this section of the book is De
Hart’s unhappiness with the conservative bent of the current Supreme
Court. Although this ideological stance is not surprising given the
clear respect for Ginsburg’s work that led De Hart to write this book,
the author’s stridency sometimes detracts from her analysis.
These criticisms aside, De Hart offers the reader a comprehensive
tour of Ginsburg’s Supreme Court career. She catalogs the justice’s
occasional victories, like United States v. Virginia,
in which Ginsburg wrote a majority opinion striking down the Virginia
Military Institute’s male-only admission policy, and her more frequent
setbacks. Those setbacks spurred Ginsburg to write the strong dissents
that inspired her pop-culture persona, the “Notorious RBG.”
Court-watchers humorously compared her scathing critique of the
conservative majority’s decision in a landmark voting-rights case to
Biggie Smalls’ biting rap lyrics. The rest is history – and shelves full
of RBG merchandise.
A central question in the book is how a tiny, soft-spoken
civil-procedure maven memorably described by Justice Harry Blackmun
after an oral argument as a “very precise female” became a progressive
icon. To some degree, this apparent contradiction simply reflects the
differing facets of the justice’s personality: She is a detail-oriented
workaholic who is moved to tears by grand opera, an ambitious achiever
who delights in friends and family, and a rule-follower willing to
rewrite the rules to correct injustice. In another sense, Ginsburg’s
perceived evolution from “a woman for whom the word ‘moderate’ dangled
from her wrist like an ID bracelet” to the inspiration for a
Kickstarter-funded action figure is a function of the increasing
conservatism of the Supreme Court. Yesterday’s New Deal moderate is
today’s left-wing dissenter. In the immortal words of Norma Desmond in
“Sunset Boulevard” – whom Ginsburg otherwise resembles only in her
fondness for wearing turbans – “I am big. It’s the pictures that got
small.”
The author of this book review clerked for Ginsburg from
1989-1990 on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit and testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee in support
of Ginsburg’s nomination to the Supreme Court in 1993.
The post Book review: “Ruth Bader Ginsburg”: The evolution of a justice appeared first on SCOTUSblog.
Friday, January 11, 2019
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