Americans have long been identified as a people of law and lawyers with
an addiction to lawsuits. In Litigation Nation, Peter Charles Hoffer,
one of America's most preeminent legal historians, charts the history of
civil litigation from the seventeenth century to the present, using key
cases pursued by ordinary people to illustrate how the civil courts have
been a battlefront to contest the boundaries of permissible personal
conduct in times of social and political change. Using representative
case studies from each period--from defamation suits in
seventeenth-century America to recent civil rights and gender
discrimination lawsuits, Hoffer's concise and accessible history shows
how litigation reflects the lives and values of ordinary Americans.