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Gentleman as Hero: Atticus Finch and the Lonely Path
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 April 2015
Extract
Any reviewer of Tom Shaffer's biography and the list of his more than 250 articles, essays and books, is reminded of the way in which Tom distinguishes a hero from an everyday lawyer. His distinction perhaps fits Tom, but it more surely describes a major character of lawyer fiction with whose name Tom Shaffer's will be forever linked—the person of Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird.
The story of a hero, Tom says, has a compelling quality that we are struck by—“we like [heros] and, more than liking them, we find in them something that keeps us from leaving them alone.” Second, he claims, a hero has the virtue of prodigiousness: “The hero goes beyond himself. There is something extraordinary about his effort. There is more in what he does than we can see ourselves doing ….” Third, he notes the numinous: “The hero is in touch with something special, something awesome and fascinating, something that attracts us and repels us at the same time.” Fourth, a hero is useful—“[he]… becomes a hero because his story fits the moral needs of the times.” Finally, a hero “is a person of bravery and insight.” “He understands what is going on … and he acts in reference to what is going on in a relatively clear-sighted, skillful way.”
- Type
- Commentary on the Work of Thomas L. Shaffer
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University 1993
References
1. See Goffney, Edward McGlynn Jr., In Praise of a Gentle Soul, 10 J Law & Relig 279 (1993–1994)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
2. Bibliography of the work of Thomas L. Shaffer, on file with the Journal of Law & Religion.
3. Lee, Harper, To Kill a Mockingbird, (Warner, 1982)Google Scholar.
4. Shaffer, Thomas, Faith and the Professions 22 (Brigham Young U Press, 1987)Google Scholar.
5. Id at 23.
6. Id at 25.
7. Id at 26.
8. Id at 27.
9. Id.
10. Ball, Milner S., The Word and the Law 7–16 (U Chicago Press, 1993)Google Scholar.
11. Id at 8.
12. Id.
13. Id at 9-10.
14. I am indebted to a student, Anna Marie Thatcher, for making this point most distinctly in her paper for ethics, where she argues that Clarence Darrow, not Atticus Finch, resembles the classical hero best.
15. See, for example, Shaffer, , Faith at 187, 193–94 (cited note 4)Google Scholar.
16. Id at 194-97.
17. Shaffer, , Faith, at 193 (cited note 4)Google Scholar.
18. See, for example, Shaffer, , Faith at 5–12 (cited note 4)Google Scholar.
19. Shaffer, , Faith (cited note 4) at 196Google Scholar.
20. Shaffer, , Faith at 220 (cited note 4)Google Scholar.
21. Id.
22. Id at 221.
23. Id at 220.
24. Id at 188-92 and passim.
25. Id at 192.
26. Id.