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This collection celebrating the work of Professor Ewan McKendrick is a notable new addition to what has become a popular academic literary genre, in law as in other fields of study. It is worth pausing to reflect on what a reader may expect or hope to find in a volume of this kind. What are the qualities of a good festschrift?
To answer that question it is necessary to consider the book’s purpose. The purpose of a festschrift is to celebrate and honour the work of the eminent scholar to whom it is dedicated (the honoree). But how can a volume of chapters on topical legal issues honour an individual? It can do so, I apprehend, by showing the honoree’s impact on their chosen field of learning—in this case the law of obligations—and on other scholars in this field.
That impact may be measured in two dimensions: first, the identity and range of the contributors; second, the quality and range of their contributions to the book. If many distinguished scholars who are themselves foremost in the field so admire the honoree that they wish tangibly to acknowledge their debt and show their respect by contributing a piece of writing to the collection, that is itself a mark of influence and achievement. Ideally, the range of contributors will also illustrate the full trajectory—temporally, geographically, and thematically—of the honoree’s career. The ideal contribution, I would suggest, is a piece of original work, valuable in its own right but written specially for the occasion, which reflects—either directly, or indirectly by pursuing ideas which the honoree has helped to inspire—the influence of the honoree on the topic discussed in the chapter and on its author. Again, the range of contributions will ideally reflect the range of the honoree’s own work.
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