An analysis of the legal and sociological ramifications of acts of violence perpetrated by women in literature. Sophocles' “Antigone,” Susan Glaspell's modern theatrical drama “Trifles,” (later adapted into the short story, 'A Jury of Her Peers'), and Scott Turow's novel Presumed Innocent provide powerful examples of how women's acts of violence are either vilified or lionized in fiction. The author then examines how the law would characterize the women's actions
Book synopsis: Law and Literature, the second volume in the Current Legal Issues series, is a compre...
Recent Supreme Court decisions such as Atkins v. Virginia and Lawrence v. Texas specifically addres...
In this study, I examine the dramatization of violence against the female body in contemporary drama...
An analysis of the legal and sociological ramifications of acts of violence perpetrated by women in ...
This thesis studies book-length literature from four cases of violent crime—the unsolved murder of E...
I urge literature upon lawyers and law students to teach how the culture of the law attracts and rep...
1970s and 1980s feminist writing about rape in relation to early modern legal practice and to its re...
Includes bibliographical references and index.narratives in the case of Mary Blandy, parricide, 1752...
This book chapter discusses the use of literary material as a means of studying criminal law. The ch...
For the past twenty years, the law and literature movement has been gaining ground. More recently, a...
Two recent novels, Presumed Innocent and The Good Mother, have more in common than critical success,...
Book extract kindly used with the permission of the University of Akron Press.For the past twenty ye...
In her Article Professor Ashe explores the model of the bad, or unfit, mother in law and literat...
As an Actor Combatant with the Society of American Fight Directors, theatrical violence is something...
This is a monographic volume which explores the relationship between language and questions of so...
Book synopsis: Law and Literature, the second volume in the Current Legal Issues series, is a compre...
Recent Supreme Court decisions such as Atkins v. Virginia and Lawrence v. Texas specifically addres...
In this study, I examine the dramatization of violence against the female body in contemporary drama...
An analysis of the legal and sociological ramifications of acts of violence perpetrated by women in ...
This thesis studies book-length literature from four cases of violent crime—the unsolved murder of E...
I urge literature upon lawyers and law students to teach how the culture of the law attracts and rep...
1970s and 1980s feminist writing about rape in relation to early modern legal practice and to its re...
Includes bibliographical references and index.narratives in the case of Mary Blandy, parricide, 1752...
This book chapter discusses the use of literary material as a means of studying criminal law. The ch...
For the past twenty years, the law and literature movement has been gaining ground. More recently, a...
Two recent novels, Presumed Innocent and The Good Mother, have more in common than critical success,...
Book extract kindly used with the permission of the University of Akron Press.For the past twenty ye...
In her Article Professor Ashe explores the model of the bad, or unfit, mother in law and literat...
As an Actor Combatant with the Society of American Fight Directors, theatrical violence is something...
This is a monographic volume which explores the relationship between language and questions of so...
Book synopsis: Law and Literature, the second volume in the Current Legal Issues series, is a compre...
Recent Supreme Court decisions such as Atkins v. Virginia and Lawrence v. Texas specifically addres...
In this study, I examine the dramatization of violence against the female body in contemporary drama...