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lawyers and literature Jeremy Gilman Jeremy Gilman, "The Real World School of Law,"
20 (2) New England Review (1999)[reprinted: 24 Legal Stud. F. 19 (2000)] I further assume that everyone might not find the story humorous. So, we might divide ourselves into two camps: those who found the story humorous and those who did not. What do you think this division of the class might tell us about who we are as readers? [Maybe we could divide the class into two camps, yet again, this time, placing in one camp those who found the Kafka parable intriguing and those who simply found it inscrutable and unsufferable (boring and bothersome even though short). What data might this two camps of Kafka readers provide?]
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