Literary and legal scholar Stanley Fish examines the moral structure of the long-running, fabled, 1960s television series "The Fugitive." For Fish, the show's hero, Richard Kimble, is the perfect representative of the virtues and the dark side of mid-twentieth-century liberalism.
Über den Autor Stanley Fish
Stanley Fish is a professor of law at Florida International University in Miami, and dean emeritus of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Illinois in Chicago. He has also taught at the University of California at Berkeley, Johns Hopkins University, and Duke University. He is the author of fourteen books, most recently Fugitive in Flight and Save the World on Your Own Time. He lives in Andes, New York, and New York City.