This article aims to re-evaluate the contribution of Stanley Fish to legal studies. In "The Law Wishes to Have a Formal existence", Fish accused the law of maintaining a formal, positivistic self-image as principled; an activity rhat rises above processes of interpretation and of moral judgement. For this `antiformalist‘ Fish there is thus a false sense of self-sufficent closure to the law\u27s discourse. More recently however: in discussing the practice of another profession (namely literary criticism) Fish demonstrates that the basis of aclivity per se is internal intelligibility - that is intelligibility within a defined community. These apparent inconsistencies are explored. Re-reading `The ...
Legal activity invariably takes place within some structure, however lax. No matter how often the im...
AbstractThis article identifies the theoretical and practical limits of postmodern skepticism about ...
The article has two aims: first to explain, andif possible escape, confusion about what law is and w...
Stanley Fish, author of Doing What Comes Naturally, Is There a Text in This Class?, There\u27s No Su...
A professor of law and literature at Duke University, Stanley Fish has entered into debates about th...
This article is a review of Michael Robertson’s book “Stanley Fish on Philosophy, Politics and Law: ...
In Versions of Academic Freedom: From Professionalism to Revolution, Stanley Fish turns his prodigio...
The formula of "defence of overinterpretation" referred to in the title of this article must be rece...
Few would dispute that law and legal procedures lie at the core of American self-identity and are wo...
Literary and legal scholar Stanley Fish delivers the 101st Sibley Lecture titled There Is No Textua...
Imagine two citizens, one of whom obeys the law only in order to avoid being sanctioned for noncompl...
Few would dispute that law and legal procedures lie at the core of American self-identity and are wo...
STANLEY FISH is an equal opportunity antagonist. A theorist who has taken on theorists, an academici...
It is a wicked pleasure to read Versions of Academic Freedom. The field of academic freedom is prese...
"This book considers the seminal debate in jurisprudence between Ronald Dworkin and Stanley Fish. It...
Legal activity invariably takes place within some structure, however lax. No matter how often the im...
AbstractThis article identifies the theoretical and practical limits of postmodern skepticism about ...
The article has two aims: first to explain, andif possible escape, confusion about what law is and w...
Stanley Fish, author of Doing What Comes Naturally, Is There a Text in This Class?, There\u27s No Su...
A professor of law and literature at Duke University, Stanley Fish has entered into debates about th...
This article is a review of Michael Robertson’s book “Stanley Fish on Philosophy, Politics and Law: ...
In Versions of Academic Freedom: From Professionalism to Revolution, Stanley Fish turns his prodigio...
The formula of "defence of overinterpretation" referred to in the title of this article must be rece...
Few would dispute that law and legal procedures lie at the core of American self-identity and are wo...
Literary and legal scholar Stanley Fish delivers the 101st Sibley Lecture titled There Is No Textua...
Imagine two citizens, one of whom obeys the law only in order to avoid being sanctioned for noncompl...
Few would dispute that law and legal procedures lie at the core of American self-identity and are wo...
STANLEY FISH is an equal opportunity antagonist. A theorist who has taken on theorists, an academici...
It is a wicked pleasure to read Versions of Academic Freedom. The field of academic freedom is prese...
"This book considers the seminal debate in jurisprudence between Ronald Dworkin and Stanley Fish. It...
Legal activity invariably takes place within some structure, however lax. No matter how often the im...
AbstractThis article identifies the theoretical and practical limits of postmodern skepticism about ...
The article has two aims: first to explain, andif possible escape, confusion about what law is and w...