 David R. Papke - Professor of Law
E-mail: david.papke@marquette.edu
Phone: (414) 288-1905
SSRN: Papers by David Papke
Blog: Visit the Faculty Blog
Courses Taught This Session:
Other Courses Taught: Family Law, Property, Jurisprudence
Biography:
David Papke joined the Marquette University Law School faculty in 2002 after serving on the Indiana University School of Law-Indianapolis faculty for eighteen years. Professor Papke worked earlier as Dean of Yale University's Davenport College, and he has been a visiting professor at the University of Illinois and Indiana University-Bloomington. In 1986-87 he was a Fulbright professor at Tamkang University, Taipei, and he has lectured in Denmark, Switzerland, St. Kitts, Taiwan, and Vietnam. Professor Papke teaches Property, Family Law, Jurisprudence, Legal History, and a range of courses and seminars in law and the humanities. He has a special scholarly interest in the role of law in American culture. He is the author of Framing the Criminal: Crime, Cultural Work, and the Loss of Critical Perspective (1987), Narrative and the Legal Discourse: Storytelling and the Law (1991), Heretics in the Temple: Americans Who Reject the Nation's Legal Faith (1998), The Pullman Case: The Clash of Labor and Capital in Industrial America (1999), and Law and Popular Culture: Text, Notes, and Questions (2008).
Special Recognitions: Professor Papke served as the lead author for the recently published Law and Popular Culture:
Text, Notes, and Questions (LexisNexis, 2008), the first comprehensive law school textbook concerning the relationships of law and popular culture.
Professor Papke spoke on July 22, 2009 at the Institute for Research on Poverty, University of Wisconsin - Madison, on "Law's Role in Creating and Perpetuating the Contemporary Urban Underclass."
|
|