This article raises the critical issue as to why there has been assumed to be a boundary to legal knowledge. In response to such an issue I focus upon the works of Jacques Derrida who, amongst other things, was concerned with the boundary of the disciplines of Literature, Philosophy and Law. The article argues that the boundary delimits the law as if the inside of a boundary to territorial-like legal space in legal consciousness. Such a space is not possible without the boundary. Derrida’s most insightful essay in this regard is his study of Franz Kafka’s untitled parable in The Trial. The parable represents a man who waits for an invitation to enter the Law until he nears his end. Derrida responds to the parable in his essay, “Before the L...
Book synopsis: Amongst the last generation of continental philosophers Derrida stands out as the mos...
This Article examines the treatment of deconstruction in United States judicial opinions.\u27 A hand...
Are Fran T Kafka's representations of law and legality figments of his imagination, or do they go be...
This article raises the critical issue as to why there has been assumed to be a boundary to legal kn...
Amongst the last generation of continental philosophers Derrida stands out as the most jurisprudenti...
The purpose of this Article is to introduce legal readers to the ideas of the French philosopher Jac...
Kafka interpretation is an industry without foreseeable limits: It has a trajectory of its own-proli...
The author starts with a discussion on the deconstruc-tive reading of the parable "Before the Law" f...
Drucilla Cornell’s book The Philosophy of the Limit has for a long time been an important reference ...
Readings of Derrida’s work on law and justice have tended to stress the distinction between them. Th...
From early in his career Jacques Derrida was intrigued by law. Over time, this fascination with law ...
Are Franz Kafka’s representations of law and legality figments of his imagination, or do they go bey...
The works written in Persian about Jacques Derrida or the works translated into Persian about and fr...
The purpose of this article is twofold. First, it offers a complementary reading of Franz Kafka’s wr...
Law is a prominent theme in Kafka’s works, and this dissertation proposes to read Kafka’s long prose...
Book synopsis: Amongst the last generation of continental philosophers Derrida stands out as the mos...
This Article examines the treatment of deconstruction in United States judicial opinions.\u27 A hand...
Are Fran T Kafka's representations of law and legality figments of his imagination, or do they go be...
This article raises the critical issue as to why there has been assumed to be a boundary to legal kn...
Amongst the last generation of continental philosophers Derrida stands out as the most jurisprudenti...
The purpose of this Article is to introduce legal readers to the ideas of the French philosopher Jac...
Kafka interpretation is an industry without foreseeable limits: It has a trajectory of its own-proli...
The author starts with a discussion on the deconstruc-tive reading of the parable "Before the Law" f...
Drucilla Cornell’s book The Philosophy of the Limit has for a long time been an important reference ...
Readings of Derrida’s work on law and justice have tended to stress the distinction between them. Th...
From early in his career Jacques Derrida was intrigued by law. Over time, this fascination with law ...
Are Franz Kafka’s representations of law and legality figments of his imagination, or do they go bey...
The works written in Persian about Jacques Derrida or the works translated into Persian about and fr...
The purpose of this article is twofold. First, it offers a complementary reading of Franz Kafka’s wr...
Law is a prominent theme in Kafka’s works, and this dissertation proposes to read Kafka’s long prose...
Book synopsis: Amongst the last generation of continental philosophers Derrida stands out as the mos...
This Article examines the treatment of deconstruction in United States judicial opinions.\u27 A hand...
Are Fran T Kafka's representations of law and legality figments of his imagination, or do they go be...