When lawyers use images in juristic texts, what is their legal meaning? Specifically, when legal texts print pictures of Justice and of Justice blindfolded, as they did particularly in the sixteenth century in legally authored emblem books and works of doctrine, then what is their significance for lawyers? And more specifically still, what is the proper interpretation of the blindfold, which we find not only on Justice (Justitia) but also on juristic representations of Cupid, Fate (Fortuna), bridegrooms, and the condemned? My answer, I will not tease or otherwise keep you waiting, is that the image of Justitia is technically an aenigma iuris, a legal symbol whose referent has been forgotten
This Essay focuses on Justitia\u27s more problematic attributes. Like Justitia\u27s blindfold, which...
Lawyers, judges, and jurors face a vast array of visual evidence and visual argument inside the cont...
What happens when we approach certain objects heuristically as images? How is one to orient oneself ...
When lawyers use images in juristic texts, what is their legal meaning? Specifically, when legal tex...
The statue of Lady Justice, a blindfold over her eyes, holding scales in one hand and a sword in the...
Founded on the tripartite emblematic tradition of 'inscriptio' (word as title or motto), 'pictura' (...
This is the final version of the article, which has been published in final form at: https://www.les...
It was the classical task of legal rhetoric to make law both seen and understood. These conjoint goa...
As Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis remind us in Representing Justice, the image of Justitia, blindfo...
The book is an iconographic essay on the blindness of Justice. The first book on this topic in Portu...
The contributions to this volume were written by historians, legal historians and art historians, ea...
Justitia-our icon of justice. She sits or stands above courthouses or in courtrooms, supposedly over...
International audienceThis book is the result of a series of three colloquia at the École française ...
This image on the opening page of this essay graced the front of the brochure for the Conference Wom...
Jacques-Louis David, 'The execution of Brutus's sons' (sketch), ca. 1785, New York, Morgan Library &...
This Essay focuses on Justitia\u27s more problematic attributes. Like Justitia\u27s blindfold, which...
Lawyers, judges, and jurors face a vast array of visual evidence and visual argument inside the cont...
What happens when we approach certain objects heuristically as images? How is one to orient oneself ...
When lawyers use images in juristic texts, what is their legal meaning? Specifically, when legal tex...
The statue of Lady Justice, a blindfold over her eyes, holding scales in one hand and a sword in the...
Founded on the tripartite emblematic tradition of 'inscriptio' (word as title or motto), 'pictura' (...
This is the final version of the article, which has been published in final form at: https://www.les...
It was the classical task of legal rhetoric to make law both seen and understood. These conjoint goa...
As Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis remind us in Representing Justice, the image of Justitia, blindfo...
The book is an iconographic essay on the blindness of Justice. The first book on this topic in Portu...
The contributions to this volume were written by historians, legal historians and art historians, ea...
Justitia-our icon of justice. She sits or stands above courthouses or in courtrooms, supposedly over...
International audienceThis book is the result of a series of three colloquia at the École française ...
This image on the opening page of this essay graced the front of the brochure for the Conference Wom...
Jacques-Louis David, 'The execution of Brutus's sons' (sketch), ca. 1785, New York, Morgan Library &...
This Essay focuses on Justitia\u27s more problematic attributes. Like Justitia\u27s blindfold, which...
Lawyers, judges, and jurors face a vast array of visual evidence and visual argument inside the cont...
What happens when we approach certain objects heuristically as images? How is one to orient oneself ...