This Article is one example of a film, law, and society project. Hoping to contribute to the emerging body of law and film scholarship, this Article suggests that some popular feature films offer unique cinematic insight into our understanding of the relationship between law, society, and culture. Furthermore, some films go beyond contributing cinematic-theoretical input and conduct their own cinematic socio-cultural judging-acts. Engaging in sociocultural dialogue with legal discourse, a film\u27s underlying structure may evoke its viewer\u27s unconscious, intuitive familiarity with legal notions and conventions, and, relying on legal intuition thus evoked, the film may manipulate it and engage the viewer in its own implicit judgin...
Described by Richard Sherwin of New York Law School as the law and film movement's 'founding text', ...
The American trial and American cinema share certain epistemological tendencies. Both stake claims t...
This Article challenges stereotypes and misconceptions about law-genre documentaries. Part I will pr...
The articles collected in this Symposium Issue on Legal Outsiders in American Film are examples of a...
Any one film can sustain a myriad of compelling interpretations. A collection of films, however, sha...
Comparative Law has developed through time a plurality of approaches and methodologies. In particula...
Originally described by Richard Sherwin of New York Law School as the law and film movement's 'found...
Essay which explores the ways in which law interacts with and is represented in film. Seeks both a t...
Law and film is a quickly-developing interdisciplinary branch which has recently been getting more a...
In this paper, the authors seek to use the insights gained by viewing and thinking critically about ...
The study upon which this article is based arose from a series of seminars on Law and Film Studies d...
Two main theses are presented here. The first is that there is a conceptual resemblance between the ...
Screening Justice is designed to tell the complex story of law through an exploration of forty films...
This article examines how the concept of 'law' is culturally defined through a semiotic analysis of ...
This Article is an attempt to think critically about the pop cultural life of law, to investigate th...
Described by Richard Sherwin of New York Law School as the law and film movement's 'founding text', ...
The American trial and American cinema share certain epistemological tendencies. Both stake claims t...
This Article challenges stereotypes and misconceptions about law-genre documentaries. Part I will pr...
The articles collected in this Symposium Issue on Legal Outsiders in American Film are examples of a...
Any one film can sustain a myriad of compelling interpretations. A collection of films, however, sha...
Comparative Law has developed through time a plurality of approaches and methodologies. In particula...
Originally described by Richard Sherwin of New York Law School as the law and film movement's 'found...
Essay which explores the ways in which law interacts with and is represented in film. Seeks both a t...
Law and film is a quickly-developing interdisciplinary branch which has recently been getting more a...
In this paper, the authors seek to use the insights gained by viewing and thinking critically about ...
The study upon which this article is based arose from a series of seminars on Law and Film Studies d...
Two main theses are presented here. The first is that there is a conceptual resemblance between the ...
Screening Justice is designed to tell the complex story of law through an exploration of forty films...
This article examines how the concept of 'law' is culturally defined through a semiotic analysis of ...
This Article is an attempt to think critically about the pop cultural life of law, to investigate th...
Described by Richard Sherwin of New York Law School as the law and film movement's 'founding text', ...
The American trial and American cinema share certain epistemological tendencies. Both stake claims t...
This Article challenges stereotypes and misconceptions about law-genre documentaries. Part I will pr...