At the beginning of the 21st century an audience consisting mainly of lawyers will not need to be persuaded that the law has a contribution to make to literature or, at any rate, that it has a literature of its own. A hundred years ago it might have been different. The Oxford Book of English Prose, published in 1925, contained extracts from only three reported judgments. By a coincidence, it was in the Yale Review of the same year that Benjamin Cardozo’s Law and Literature first appeared, since when the opinion has been growing, certainly amongst lawyers, that there must be something in it
First published in the Pennsylvania law review and the Yale law journal.Includes bibliographical ref...
Law and Literature courses are intended, at least in part, to supply the sound moral understanding a...
In any system of judge-made law the longevity, education and character of a judge have enhanced sign...
At the beginning of the 21st century an audience consisting mainly of lawyers will not need to be pe...
LordDenning-The Judge and the Law Edited by J.L. Jowell & J.P.W.B. McAuslan [London: Sweet &...
Many Law schools publish their own law journals. In the United Kingdom, these are often edited by fa...
The author here examines the ways in which law and literature complement each other; legal settings ...
The article discusses how the study of literature can contribute to a law student's legal education ...
I am delighted to announce the publication of our Magna Carta 2015 Special Edition of the Denning La...
The editors of Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature, and its contributors too, deserve congratulat...
non-peer-reviewedEdmund Burke’s training in, knowledge of, and appreciation for, law is generally r...
The connection between law and (imaginative) literature can still affect surprisingly. The theme of...
In the late sixteenth century, the common law experienced a phenomenal growth, both in the number of...
The great writers have one thing in common-they castigate the human race, including themselves, the ...
Stare decisis et non quieta movere. The sepulchral words roll from the hidebound pages of Bouvier\u...
First published in the Pennsylvania law review and the Yale law journal.Includes bibliographical ref...
Law and Literature courses are intended, at least in part, to supply the sound moral understanding a...
In any system of judge-made law the longevity, education and character of a judge have enhanced sign...
At the beginning of the 21st century an audience consisting mainly of lawyers will not need to be pe...
LordDenning-The Judge and the Law Edited by J.L. Jowell & J.P.W.B. McAuslan [London: Sweet &...
Many Law schools publish their own law journals. In the United Kingdom, these are often edited by fa...
The author here examines the ways in which law and literature complement each other; legal settings ...
The article discusses how the study of literature can contribute to a law student's legal education ...
I am delighted to announce the publication of our Magna Carta 2015 Special Edition of the Denning La...
The editors of Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature, and its contributors too, deserve congratulat...
non-peer-reviewedEdmund Burke’s training in, knowledge of, and appreciation for, law is generally r...
The connection between law and (imaginative) literature can still affect surprisingly. The theme of...
In the late sixteenth century, the common law experienced a phenomenal growth, both in the number of...
The great writers have one thing in common-they castigate the human race, including themselves, the ...
Stare decisis et non quieta movere. The sepulchral words roll from the hidebound pages of Bouvier\u...
First published in the Pennsylvania law review and the Yale law journal.Includes bibliographical ref...
Law and Literature courses are intended, at least in part, to supply the sound moral understanding a...
In any system of judge-made law the longevity, education and character of a judge have enhanced sign...