textIn this paper, I argue that legal authorities assign speaking power to objects and evidence in the courtroom in order to deny speaking power to racialized subjects and police racial identities. Mark Twain’s Pudd’nhead Wilson (1894) demonstrates how the law transverses the human/object boundary in order to regulate legal definitions of identity. I examine the legal animation of the textual document, as exemplified by the last will and testament; the knife, a material object that as a murder weapon is responsible for condemning the accused; and the fingerprint, a unique form of bodily evidence that merges the textual and the material, in order to understand how these objects blur the line between the living and the deceased, between hum...
Over the past thirty years or so, theoretical work in such fields as legal semiotics and law and lit...
In this dissertation, I examine legal definitions of race within the United States and the represent...
Demarest: Hints for Forensic Practice. A Monograph on Certain Rules appertaining to the Subject of...
textIn this paper, I argue that legal authorities assign speaking power to objects and evidence in t...
Legal fictions contain embedded nuggets of information about social reality and reveal important asp...
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing...
In Discourses of Ordinary Justice, I read fiction by Charles Chesnutt, Edith Wharton, and Richard Wr...
In this article I conduct an examination of discursive identity of a legal ‘object’ in the course of...
Legal Fictions: Constituting Race, Composing Literature is an intriguing addition to Karla Holloway’...
The literature concerning language, law, and power has traditionally focused on the linguistic strat...
This article explores the many and varies legal characters that populated the bench and bar in Mark ...
This article will present the literary concept of endowed objects, provide examples of endowed objec...
In this issue we feature edited versions of many of the papers given at the symposium the journal sp...
Author of Chapter 2.3: Memory, History, and Forgetting: Shelby County v. Alabama. Drawing on insight...
Although the law abounds in fabrications, the term “legal fiction” is best reserved for what Alf Ros...
Over the past thirty years or so, theoretical work in such fields as legal semiotics and law and lit...
In this dissertation, I examine legal definitions of race within the United States and the represent...
Demarest: Hints for Forensic Practice. A Monograph on Certain Rules appertaining to the Subject of...
textIn this paper, I argue that legal authorities assign speaking power to objects and evidence in t...
Legal fictions contain embedded nuggets of information about social reality and reveal important asp...
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing...
In Discourses of Ordinary Justice, I read fiction by Charles Chesnutt, Edith Wharton, and Richard Wr...
In this article I conduct an examination of discursive identity of a legal ‘object’ in the course of...
Legal Fictions: Constituting Race, Composing Literature is an intriguing addition to Karla Holloway’...
The literature concerning language, law, and power has traditionally focused on the linguistic strat...
This article explores the many and varies legal characters that populated the bench and bar in Mark ...
This article will present the literary concept of endowed objects, provide examples of endowed objec...
In this issue we feature edited versions of many of the papers given at the symposium the journal sp...
Author of Chapter 2.3: Memory, History, and Forgetting: Shelby County v. Alabama. Drawing on insight...
Although the law abounds in fabrications, the term “legal fiction” is best reserved for what Alf Ros...
Over the past thirty years or so, theoretical work in such fields as legal semiotics and law and lit...
In this dissertation, I examine legal definitions of race within the United States and the represent...
Demarest: Hints for Forensic Practice. A Monograph on Certain Rules appertaining to the Subject of...