Visions and Revisions of Law and Literature (original) (raw)
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Literature and Law: Mirrors facing each other
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science
I. INTRODUCTION Literature and law though being separate branches of social sciences share some proximity and amalgamate in objectives. Literature tends towards abstraction, creativity, variety in description and narration and is abundant in genres. Law on the other hand tends towards clarity, logical interpretation scope, definite pattern and style of drafting and is varied in branches. " The relationship between law and literature is rich and complex. In the past three and half decades, the topic has received much attention from literary critics and legal scholars studying modern literature. Ever since the publication of James Boyd White's The Legal Imagination in 1973, there have been numerous books and articles studying the role of law in the plays of Shakespeare or the novels of Dostoevsky, Melville, Kafka and Camus. Some writers have studied works of literature from jurisprudential perspective; others have applied the tools of literary analysis to legal texts such as ...
This encyclopedia entry provides an historical overview of the law and literature movement. It discusses the involvement of lawyers in American literature in the antebellum period, interest in judicial rhetoric and philosophy of language among progressive era legal theorists, and the turn to literary theory among American constitutional theorists and critical legal scholars during the late twentieth century. The emergence of law and literature movements in the U.K. and on the continent are also briefly discussed. Authors discussed include Ronald Dworkin, Stanley Fish, Peter Goodrich, Martha Nussbaum, Richard Weisberg, Brook Thomas, Robert Weisberg, Robin West, and J.B. White.
Law and Literature: A Review of Interdisciplinary Literary Texts
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This paper explores and recognizes common points of intersection of law and literature. Different literary texts have legal language, court scenes, cross examinations, lawyers, witnesses, judge, and audience. The main focus of this paper is to identify such events from literary texts and also to present instances that people take into the courts from literary texts. Law and literature originate and develop, after all, from the same culture and society. Humanities and social sciences are common grounds of origin and development of law and literature. They are related with each other. They do have correlation on the basis of culture, social norms and values, and humanities. In this paper, they discussed on the grounds of cognitive and behaviouristic aspects of human life.
2010
This Dossier collects proceedings of the second edition of the Special Workshop on Law and Literature, held on September 18, in Beijing, as part of the 24th World Conference of Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy (IVR). The workshop was coordinated by M. Paola Mittica and chaired in Beijing by Vincenzo Ferrari, president of the Italian Society for the Philosophy of Law. You can find here the contributions by Vera Karam de Chueiri, Jose Manuel Aroso Linhares, Monica Sette Lopes, Alessia Magliacane, M. Paola Mittica, Marzio Pieri, Istvan H. Szilagyi, Alberto Vespaziani, Irem Aki, Wojciech Zaluski.
Literary Analysis of Law: Reorienting the Connections Between Law and Literature
Critical Analysis of Law
This special issue on the New Literary Analysis of Law features articles that dispense with the choice between “law in literature” and “law as literature,” to ask how legal and literary forms, methods, concepts, and attitudes can be productively explored in tandem. Conventionally, when scholars ask how legal actors and problems are portrayed in literature, or how hermeneutic theory may shed light on statutory or constitutional interpretation, these questions are meant to help solve a legal problem, at a doctrinal or conceptual level. But once we abandon the requirement that literature serve as an assistant in this fashion, many new possibilities for the literary study of law come into visibility. The essays in this special issue explore some of those directions.
Literature and Law: A Study on the Intersection of Literary Narratives and Legal Systems
Samdarshi ISSN: 2581-3986 Vol 16 Issue 2 (July 2023), 2023
The relationship between law and literature has long been a subject of interest to scholars from diverse fields. While law provides a framework for societal governance, literature serves as a reflection of cultural and social norms. This paper explores the intersection of law and literature and critically analyses the role of literature in shaping legal discourse and vice versa. The paper argues that literature serves as an important tool for understanding and critiquing the law, while the law influences the themes and content of literature. The paper also examines the historical evolution of law and literature and highlights key debates surrounding the relationship between the two disciplines. Using case studies from various literary works, the paper analysis the ways in which literature engages with legal themes and the extent to which literature can contribute to legal scholarship.