Skip to content
Celebrating Black History Month 2026: A Living Archive of Thought, Culture, and Possibility
Apply
Stories

Getting to the heart of the matter with the language of law

People in this story

The Vineyard Gazette, August 2024

Patricia Williams does not shy away from hard subjects. From writing about CRISPR gene editing to critical race theory, the Northeastern University law professor fielded questions and shared reflections on a host of bioethical, racial and legal topics at a book talk on Sunday. Ms. Williams spoke with writer, photographer and art historian Teju Cole at Featherstone Center for the Arts to discuss her newest book of essays, The Miracle of the Black Leg: Notes on Race, Human Bodies, and the Spirit of the Law.

Ms. Williams said the unifying force for her wide-ranging book was born from her fixation with a painting of Cosmas and Damian, two physicians who were later sainted, performing a transplantation of a Black leg onto a white body. The original owner of the limb lies lifeless and legless in the foreground of the painting. The painting deeply disturbed Ms. Williams but it also provoked some legally relevant questions for the professor of contract law and MacArthur Fellowship winner. Contract law governs the creation and enforcement of agreements between parties. Constitutional law, on the other hand, concerns itself with concepts that are harder to objectively define, such as life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and civil rights and privileges.

Read more on The Vineyard Gazette.

More Stories

Bad Bunny’s meteoric rise: from grocery store bagger to Grammy awards and a Super Bowl stage MAGA can’t silence

02.10.2026

Is Puerto Rico Part of the US? Bad Bunny’s Halftime Show Sparks Questions About Identity, Culture, and Grammy Speech

02.09.2026

She restored a 112-year-old Asian American film. Now it’s in the National Film Registry

02.11.26
Northeastern Global News