Thursday, December 6, 2012

Prohibition Exhibit Deserves Good Mark for Legal Literacy

On May 30, 2010, I wrote about the role museums can have in increasing knowledge and proposed that a National Museum of (American) Law could have some value. See my article at: Idea: National Museum of (American) Law.  An excellent example of what I had in mind could be found in the exhibit: "American Spirits: the Rise and Fall of Prohibition," available at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia now.  the exhibit is available through April 28, 2013

The exhibit presents our nation's history of the prohibition with alcohol, addressing the medical and social problems that inspired many Americans to endorse the prohibition experiment--and thus the 18th Amendment, crime and other problems associated with the illegal use and purchase of alcohol during the time of prohibition, and the factors leading to the establishment of the 21st Amendment, thus ending the alcohol prohibition experiment.   Although the exhibit does not pretend to reflect on all aspects of life in the 1920s, it presents a nice window into life during that time period.

The Prohibition exhibit is appropriate for the Constitution Center, and this blog, because of its serious focus on the legal side of Prohibition.  The attendee of the exhibit is encouraged to reflect on the community organizing and lobbying involved in introducing and promotion of a Constitutional Amendment along with enabling legislation.

 One aspect of the exhibit is the "Is it Legal" game that invites participants to consider whether certain forms of alcohol use or possession is legal or illegal under the 18th Amendment and Volstead Acts.  Another aspects of the exhibit is what appears to be excerpts of records from the prosecutions of various violations of the law during the time of Prohibition.  These aspects, along with a few others, give the attendee a picture of the role of legal process in historical events.

If I were curating this exhibit for my proposed National Museum of (American) Law, I am sure I would have have done more to describe and demonstrate procedural aspects of the legal arena. However, putting aside any dream exhibit, I think this exhibit deserves high marks for very quickly illustrating the complex aspects of the legal and Constitutional experiment involving the prohibition of alcohol.  I have no doubt that the average viewer's appreciation for the legal and legislative process is expanded, at least to some extent.


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