The article presents information on criminal defense and the literary representation of law and the contemporary issue in legal reform. It focuses on the use of novel as a resource for social and legal history, ethical standards of advocacy and the works of novelist Anthony Trollope. It further discusses legal professionals, legitimation and inaccuracy in legal procedure. It also states that novelists use law as metaphor for representing issues on human conflicts and social power
This title explores Thomas Hardy's engagement with Victorian legal debates in his prose fiction. Tho...
Despite the little critical attention it has received, Lady Anna is exemplary in Trollope’s output a...
The 1836 Prisoners' Counsel Act afforded all prisoners the right to full legal representation. There...
This essay attempts to chart one of the ways in which the philosophy of law informed the Victorian n...
Novel Judgements is a book about nineteenth century Anglo-American law and literature. But by redefi...
This article examines the connections between law and literature, briefly considering work accomplis...
Anthony Trollope (1815-1882) resides in the pantheon of nineteenth century English literature. Overc...
This dissertation argues that the novel and the law courts are two historically interdependent story...
Before the era of reform, the common law was replete with fictions. The procedure by which litigatio...
Although the sheer technicality of the law’s concepts and categories often inhibits any discussion ...
This book chapter discusses the use of literary material as a means of studying criminal law. The ch...
The contemporary Law and Literature movement has revolved around a central question, the question of...
This is an open access article, freely available in ORE and from the Plymouth University Law and Cri...
Despite the considerable body of work aimed at showing that law is a form of narrative, these effort...
This thesis analyzes the evolution of the lawyer character from the novels of the early 19th century...
This title explores Thomas Hardy's engagement with Victorian legal debates in his prose fiction. Tho...
Despite the little critical attention it has received, Lady Anna is exemplary in Trollope’s output a...
The 1836 Prisoners' Counsel Act afforded all prisoners the right to full legal representation. There...
This essay attempts to chart one of the ways in which the philosophy of law informed the Victorian n...
Novel Judgements is a book about nineteenth century Anglo-American law and literature. But by redefi...
This article examines the connections between law and literature, briefly considering work accomplis...
Anthony Trollope (1815-1882) resides in the pantheon of nineteenth century English literature. Overc...
This dissertation argues that the novel and the law courts are two historically interdependent story...
Before the era of reform, the common law was replete with fictions. The procedure by which litigatio...
Although the sheer technicality of the law’s concepts and categories often inhibits any discussion ...
This book chapter discusses the use of literary material as a means of studying criminal law. The ch...
The contemporary Law and Literature movement has revolved around a central question, the question of...
This is an open access article, freely available in ORE and from the Plymouth University Law and Cri...
Despite the considerable body of work aimed at showing that law is a form of narrative, these effort...
This thesis analyzes the evolution of the lawyer character from the novels of the early 19th century...
This title explores Thomas Hardy's engagement with Victorian legal debates in his prose fiction. Tho...
Despite the little critical attention it has received, Lady Anna is exemplary in Trollope’s output a...
The 1836 Prisoners' Counsel Act afforded all prisoners the right to full legal representation. There...