Abstract

Drawing on C. Wright Mills' analysis of vocabularies of motive, this paper examines the ways lawyers and clients interpret and give meaning to the social behavior involved in the legal process of divorce. Based on observation of 115 law office conferences, the paper describes discussions between lawyers and clients concerning marriage failure, problems in the legal process, and planning strategy. It shows how lawyers and clients bring different agendas and views of the social world to these conversations. Those differences are considered part of the context for understanding the way professional authority is exercised and resisted. Clients reconstruct the past and explain their own behavior as well as the actions of their spouses. Lawyers avoid being drawn into that reconstruction. Their interpretive work explains the way the divorce process works and how it shapes the actions of divorcing spouses. The paper analyzes the predicaments created by these interpretations of reality and the consequences that flow from them.

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