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The Oxford Handbook Of Law And Humanities at Meripustak

The Oxford Handbook Of Law And Humanities by Simon Stern and Maksymilian Del Mar and Bernadette Meyler, Oxford University Press

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)Simon Stern and Maksymilian Del Mar and Bernadette Meyler
    PublisherOxford University Press
    ISBN9780190695620
    Pages920
    BindingHardback
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearFebruary 2020

    Description

    Oxford University Press The Oxford Handbook Of Law And Humanities by Simon Stern and Maksymilian Del Mar and Bernadette Meyler

    How does materiality matter to legal scholarship? What can affect studies offer to legal scholars? What are the connections among visual studies, art history, and the knowledge and experience of law? What can the disciplines of book history, digital humanities, performance studies, disability studies, and post-colonial studies contribute to contemporary and historical understandings of law? These are only some of the important questions addressed in this wide-ranging collection of law and humanities scholarship.
    Collecting 45 new essays by leading international scholars, The Oxford Handbook of Law and Humanities showcases the work of law and humanities across disciplines, addressing methods, concepts and themes, genres, and areas of the law. The essays explore under-researched domains such as comics, videos, police files, form contracts, and paratexts, and shed new light on traditional topics, such as free speech, intellectual property, international law, indigenous peoples, immigration, evidence, and human rights. The Handbook provides an exciting new agenda for scholarship in law and humanities, and will be essential reading for anyone interested in the intersections of law and humanistic inquiry.
    Table of contents:
    Part I Methodologies
    1. Materialism and Legal Historiography, From Bachelard to Benjamin
    Christopher Tomlins
    2. Legal Materiality
    Hyo Yoon Kang and Sara Kendall
    3. Law, Visual Studies, and Image History
    Carolin Behrmann
    4. Book History
    Henrike Manuwald
    5. Digital Humanities
    Stephen Robertson
    6. Postcolonial Studies
    Renisa Mawani
    7. Racial Ambiguity Blues: Contemporary Challenges for Racialization Theory in the Twenty-First Century
    Camille Gear Rich
    8. Disability, Law, and the Humanities: The Rise of Disability Legal Studies
    Rabia Belt and Doron Dorfman
    9. Psychoanalysis and Law
    Tracy McNulty
    10. Affect and Empathy Studies
    Suzanne Keen
    11. Mapping Law and Performance: Reflections on the Dilemmas of an Interdisciplinary Conjunction
    Julie Stone Peters
    Part II Themes
    12. Spacetime in/and Law
    Mariana Valverde
    13. Boundaries, Walls, Envelopes, Rooms, and Other Spatialities of Law
    Timothy Hyde
    14. The Sociality of the Platform
    Annelise Riles
    15. Personhood
    John Frow
    16. Trauma, Memory, and the Law
    Norman W. Spaulding
    17. Challenging the Legal Self through Performance
    Marett Leiboff
    18. Accident
    Daniel Williams
    19. Facing Justice: Evidence, Legibility and Pensiveness in the Early Modern Imagination
    Subha Mukherji
    20. The Gap between Fairness and Law: Hamlet and Equity from a Cognitive Perspective
    Ellen Spolsky
    21. From Eternity to Here: Divine Accommodation and the Lost Language of Law
    Nomi M. Stolzenberg
    22. Machiavelli's Camillus and the Tension between Leadership and Democracy
    John P. McCormick
    23. Agonism, Democracy, and Law
    Panu Minkkinen
    24. An Anti-Liberal Defense of Free Speech: Foundations of Democracy in the Western Philosophical Canon
    Eric Heinze
    Part III Areas of Law
    25. Family Law
    Khiara M. Bridges
    26. Human Rights
    Elizabeth S. Anker
    27. Immigration and the Imperial
    Sherally Munshi
    28. Indigenous Law
    Gregory Ablavsky, Sarah Deer, and Justin Richland
    29. Property: Changing Formations of Having and Being
    Sarah Keenan
    30. Intellectual Property's Queer Turn
    Andrew Gilden
    31. History, Literature, and Authority in International Law
    Christopher N. Warren
    32. Uncovering Credibility
    Julia Simon-Kerr
    33. Laws of Sex, Changed
    Noa Ben-Asher
    34. The Functions of Legal Literature and Case Reporting before and after Stare Decisis
    Andrew Benjamin Bricker
    Part IV Legal Genres
    35. Trials and the Impressionism of Advocacy
    Rex Ferguson
    36. Maxims
    Donald R. Davis, Jr.
    37. Responsa
    Ari Z. Bryen
    38. Legal Treatise
    Steven Wilf
    39. Legal Codes as Cultural Products
    Heikki Pihlajamäki
    40. Form Contract
    Tal Kastner
    41. Legal Paratexts
    Robert Spoo
    42. Emblems
    Valérie Hayaert
    43. Video as Text/Archive
    Bennett Capers
    44. Police Records: An Intermedia Genre
    Cristina Vatulescu
    45. Comics
    Hillary Chute
    Index
    About the Editors:
    Simon Stern teaches law and English at the University of Toronto. His research focuses on the evolution of legal doctrines and methods in relation to literary and intellectual history. Recent and forthcoming publications include articles and book chapters on legal fictions, obscenity, copyright, criminal fraud, the place of narrative in law, and methodology in legal scholarship.
    Maksymilian Del Mar is Professor of Legal Theory at the School of Law, Queen Mary University of London. His primary research interests lie in legal reasoning and legal education (especially rhetoric, imagination, and emotion), in historical jurisprudence, and in transnational and global legal theory. His monograph,Artefacts of Legal Inquiry: The Value of Imagination in Adjudication, is forthcoming with Hart / Bloomsbury in early 2020. He edits the Law in Context series for Cambridge University Press.
    Bernadette Meyler is Carl and Sheila Spaeth Professor of Law and Professor (by Courtesy) of English at Stanford University. She works on constitutional law and theory, as well as law and the humanities. Her book Theaters of Pardoning (Cornell University Press, 2019) draws on dramatic, political, and legal sources to assess the evolution of the pardon power and its relationship with sovereignty in seventeenth-century England. She is also the co-editor of New Directions in Law and Literature (Oxford University Press, 2017) and many articles in law reviews and peer-reviewed journals.



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