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Mary Joe Frug

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American legal scholar
Mary Joe Frug
Born
Mary Joe Gaw

1941
DiedApril 4, 1991(1991-04-04) (aged 49–50)
Cause of deathStabbing
Occupation(s)Professor
Legal scholar
Known forLegal postmodern feminist theory
Victim of unsolved murder
SpouseGerald Frug

Mary Joe Frug (néeGaw; 1941 – April 4, 1991) was aprofessor atNew England Law Boston, and a leadingfeministlegal scholar. She is considered a forerunner oflegalpostmodern feminist theory. Much of her work was collected in the posthumously-published book,Postmodern Legal Feminism. She is the author of thecasebookWomen and the Law.[1]

On April 4, 1991, Frug was murdered on the streets ofCambridge,Massachusetts, near the home that she shared with her husband,Harvard Law professorGerald Frug, and their two children. The murder remains unsolved.

Career

[edit]

Frug received aBachelor of Arts fromWellesley College, aJuris Doctor from theNational Law Center atGeorge Washington University, and aMaster of Laws fromNew York University.[2] She worked for three years providing free legal services to low income clients in Washington, D.C. and New York. From 1975 to 1981, she was a professor at theVillanova University School of Law.[3] In 1981, she joined the New England School of Law, where she taught until 1991. At the time of her death, she was onsabbatical, doing research as afellow atRadcliffe College’sBunting Institute.[4]

Frug was recognized in the legal field for her work in legal postmodern feminist theory. She wrote acasebook entitledWomen and the Law, and a collection of essays,Postmodern Legal Feminism (published in 1992, after her death). In her essay "A Postmodern Feminist Legal Manifesto", she argued for three general claims that explain the connection between feminism and law: “legal rules permit and sometimes mandate the terrorization of the female body”, “legal rules permit and sometimes mandate the maternalization of the female body”, and “legal rules permit and sometimes mandate the sexualization of the female body”. Her work was controversial and at times characterized as radical.[4]

Frug was a founding member of a group of female lawyers and legal scholars known as the Fem-Crits, part of theheterodoxCritical Legal Studies movement (her husband, Gerald, was also an adherent of CLS).[5][6] Fem-Crits applied the principles of CLS to feminism, to show how the law subordinates women in a male-dominated power structure.[5] The group has been described as a foundational part of "progressive resistance to conservative legal thought" during the 1980sReagan revolution,[7] and a breakaway move from the "white male-dominated Conference on Critical Legal Studies."[8]

Personal life

[edit]

Frug was born as Mary Joe Gaw inSt. Joseph, Missouri in 1941.[9] In 1968, she married Gerald Frug, with whom she had two children.[4][9] In 1981, Gerald obtained a professorship at Harvard Law School, and the family moved from thePhiladelphia area to Cambridge.[3]

Death

[edit]

On the evening of April 4, 1991, Frug was fatally stabbed while walking to a local convenience store. She received multiple wounds in the chest and upper thighs. The murder occurred in the exclusive Brattle St. neighborhood of Cambridge, in front of the Armenian Holy Trinity Apostolic Church at the corner of Sparks St. and Brewster St., less than 300 yards from her home. A passing motorist entered the church for help. Members of the choir practicing inside came out, including a Harvard professor who recognized Frug, ran to her house, and returned with her husband and daughter. At 8:57 pm, Frug was taken away by ambulance. She was pronounced dead on arrival atMount Auburn Hospital.[5][10][11][12][13]

Murder investigation

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The investigation by local police was soon joined by other police departments and theFBI. Frug's purse was found at the scene, which led investigators to rule out robbery as the motive. A witness a block away described a white male, 5'10"-6'0", late teens to early 20s, brown hair, dressed in dark clothing, running from the scene. Shoe prints were found and plaster casts taken. The murder weapon, unrecovered, was determined to be a military-style knife. A knife was found near the crime scene, butforensic examination failed to connect it to the murder.[4][5][13]

The investigation initially considered that Frug may have been targeted for her feminist academic work. This line of inquiry was eventually abandoned. One year from her death, theNew England School of Law offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to arrest.[4][14] There were no suspects, no leads, and no idea of motive at the time.[15]

Frug's murder remains unsolved. In 2019, a newly-formedcold case unit inMiddlesex County, Massachusetts took up the case.[16]

Harvard Law Review controversy

[edit]

In March 1992, the prestigious, student-edited scholarly journal, theHarvard Law Review, published an unfinished draft article by Frug called "A Postmodern Feminist Legal Manifesto," which explored legal theories on violence toward women.[17][18] Gerald Frug had submitted the article on his late wife's behalf. Some members of theReview were opposed to publishing the piece, and later parodied it in "He-Manifesto of Post-Mortem Legal Feminism", which was included in theHarvard Law Revue, an annual spoof of theReview. The essay argued that Frug's theories were the concoction of paranoid feminists.[17] It was filled with inside jokes and sexual innuendo, suggested that Frug's husband'stenure at Harvard Law was the only reason the paper was published, and mocked her death.[4][5] On April 4, 1992, the spoofRevue was presented at the annual banquet introducing the new editors of theHarvard Law Review. The date happened to be on the anniversary of Frug's death; her husband was among the invitees but did not attend.[17]

At the time of the incident, Harvard Law, considered to be one of the top law schools in the US,[19] was in the midst of a decade-longculture war.[5] During the 1970s, Harvard hired three law professors who came to be known as the founders of the critical legal studies movement, also referred to as the Crits. WithMarxist influence, the Crits saw the law as a tool for keeping privileged classes in power and control, and their mission, to deconstruct it. In the 1980s, appearing across university campuses, race and gender issues,diversity, andpolitical correctness were embraced by the Crits and entered the Harvard Law conflict.[5] Opposing the Crits over policies and hiring decisions was the traditionalist faction of the faculty, holding that the law was necessary to maintain order and equity in society. In a comment on the Frug murder, one Harvard Law professor said, "If there was going to be a murder, I'm surprised it didn't happen here—in the halls of the law school. There are long periods of time when civilized relationships are absent." TheNational Law Journal described Harvard Law in that period as "theBeirut of legal education."[5][6]

News of the essay spread in the following days, and an uproar ensued that reached the national news media. TheWall Street Journal called the furor "a vile circus".[5] In an open letter signed by most of the Harvard law faculty, the parody was called "contemptible and cruel." Two high-profile faculty members,Laurence Tribe andAlan Dershowitz, publicly clashed over the issue. Tribe forcefully condemned the authors: he compared the parody toKu Klux Klanpropaganda, called it a rape "in all but biological reality", and asked, "What is the point of teaching? I'm sharpening their knives to stab innocent victims."[5] Dershowitz defended the authors, calling the parody "somewhat" offensive, and the reaction a "witch hunt": “The overreaction to the spoof is a reflection of the power of women and blacks to define the content of what is politically correct and incorrect on college and law school campuses."[20][21] Co-authors Craig Coben and Kenneth Fenyo apologized in a statement, particularly to Frug's husband. They added that they did not mean to distribute the article on the anniversary of her death.[22] The statement was signed by other members of theReview, including the then-editorPaul Clement.[23]

Legacy

[edit]

In 1994, the Mary Joe Frug Fund was launched to establish anendowed chair at New England Law in her memory, to allow visiting professors to come to New England Law to teach women's issues in the law.[citation needed] The Women's Law Caucus at New England Law established the Mary Joe Frug Grant to provide "stipends for students at New England who devote their summers to improving the lives of women."[24]

New England Law houses the "Professor Mary Joe Frug Women and the Law Collection" at its library.[25] A fourth edition of Frug's casebook,Women and the Law, now titledMary Joe Frug's Women and the Law, was published in 2007.[26]

In a commemorative piece written by colleagues following Frug's death, Gary Minda, aCardozo Law professor, wrote: "Mary Joe inspires all of us to challenge the constraints of gender and to remain hopeful and optimistic about the possibility of coming to grips with the dilemmas of difference that separate our lives."[27]

In 2016, theNew England Law Review's Mary Joe Frug Memorial Symposium marked the 25th anniversary of Frug's death. In her written contribution,Brooklyn Law School professorElizabeth M. Schneider commented: "Twenty-five years after her death, I see even more of a need for the integration of Mary Joe's perspectives into ongoing work on feminist legal theory and practice. We are in the midst of a very fragmented time, where there seems to be little appreciation of, and sensitivity to, the history of feminist legal theory and practice... Mary Joe looked at feminist legal dilemmas in particular contexts; nuance was key, and her views were not totalistic. She vigorously rejected gender stereotypes, including the stereotype of victim. Constant re-thinking, not rigidity, was the name of the game. Also, flexibility over time."[28]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Frug, Mary Joe (1992).Women and the Law. Foundation Press.ISBN 9780882779775.
  2. ^"In Memoriam: Mary Joe Frug"(PDF).Yale University. RetrievedAug 2, 2023.
  3. ^ab"Former VLS Professor Tragically Killed".The Docket (Villanova School of Law). May 1991. RetrievedAug 2, 2023.
  4. ^abcdefLapointe, Ellen (2015)."The Tragedy of a Cambridge Feminist".3690: A Journal of First-Year Student Research Writing.2015. Archived fromthe original on Aug 2, 2023 – via Fisher Digital Publishing.
  5. ^abcdefghijCollier, Peter (Oct 1992)."Blood on the Charles".Vanity Fair. RetrievedSep 9, 2023.
  6. ^abKingson, Jennifer A. (August 30, 1987)."Harvard Tenure Battle Puts 'Critical Legal Studies' on Trial".New York Times. RetrievedSep 9, 2023.
  7. ^Baumgardner, Paul (October 2019)."Ronald Reagan, the Modern Right, and ... the Rise of the Fem-Crits".Laws.8 (4): 26.doi:10.3390/laws8040026.
  8. ^Austin, Regina; Schneider, Elizabeth M. (2001)."Mary Joe Frug's Postmodern Feminist Legal Manifesto Ten Years Later: Reflections on the State of Feminism Today".Penn Carey Law (University of Pennsylvania). RetrievedSep 7, 2023.
  9. ^ab"Mary Joe Gaw Becomes Bride Of Gerald Frug".New York Times. Oct 6, 1968. RetrievedSep 8, 2023.
  10. ^Braunstein, Todd F. (May 30, 1995)."Killing Worst Crime in Recent Campus Memory".The Harvard Crimson. RetrievedAug 1, 2023.
  11. ^"Murder Jolts Haven for Elite in Boston Area".New York Times. April 9, 1991. RetrievedAug 1, 2023.
  12. ^"Professor Is Slain on Street in Massachusetts".New York Times. April 6, 1991. RetrievedAug 1, 2023.
  13. ^abDwyer, Dialynn (July 8, 2019)."A unit dedicated to cold cases was established in the Middlesex DA's office. Here are 3 cases being looked at".Boston.com. RetrievedAug 3, 2023.
  14. ^Wirzbicki, Alan."True Crime: Killed off campus".Boston Globe. RetrievedAug 1, 2023.
  15. ^Rubin, Phil (October 8, 1992)."ON the Case".The Harvard Crimson. RetrievedAug 1, 2023.
  16. ^Dwyer, Dialynn (July 8, 2019)."3 cold cases being looked at by the new unit in the Middlesex DA's office | Boston.com".www.boston.com. Retrieved2019-12-07.
  17. ^abcMargolick, David (April 17, 1992)."At the Bar; In attacking the work of a slain professor, Harvard's elite themselves become a target".New York Times. RetrievedAug 1, 2023.
  18. ^Frug, Mary Joe (March 1992). "A Postmodern Feminist Legal Manifesto".Harvard Law Review.105 (5). The Harvard Law Review Association:1045–1075.doi:10.2307/1341520.JSTOR 1341520.
  19. ^"PRELAW HANDBOOK - Law School Rankings: 1987-1999".www.prelawhandbook.com. Retrieved2025-04-14.
  20. ^Bruck, Connie (July 29, 2019)."'Alan Dershowitz, Devil's Advocate".The New Yorker. RetrievedAug 2, 2023.
  21. ^Wang, Esther (July 29, 2019)."A Helpful Outline of All the Ways That Alan Dershowitz Sucks".Jezebel. RetrievedAug 2, 2023.
  22. ^"And You Can Quote Me".The Harvard Crimson. April 17, 1992. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2010.
  23. ^Suellentrop, Chris (September–October 2005)."Disarming and Dangerous".Legal Affairs. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2010.
  24. ^"Women's Law Caucus". neslwomen.com. Label: Mary Joe Frug Grant. Archived fromthe original on July 17, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2010.
  25. ^"Professor Mary Joe Frug Women and the Law Collection". RetrievedSeptember 13, 2010.
  26. ^"Mary Joe Frug's Women and the Law".Harvard Law School. RetrievedAug 7, 2023.
  27. ^"In Memoriam, Mary Joe Frug 1941-1991".Yale Journal of Law & Feminism.3 (1): 5. 1991.hdl:20.500.13051/7099. Retrieved2023-09-03.
  28. ^Schneider, Elizabeth M. (July 25, 2017)."Why Feminist Legal Theory Still Needs Mary Joe Frug: Thoughts on Conflicts in Feminism".New England Law Review.51 (1).

Further reading

[edit]
  • Minow, Martha. (1992). "Incomplete Correspondence: An Unsent Letter to Mary Joe Frug."Harvard Law Review, 105(5):1096-1105
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