Professors Binder and Weisberg expound a cultural criticism of law that views law as an arena for composing, representing, and contesting identity, and that treats identity as constitutive of the interests that motivate instrumental action. They explicate this critical method by reference to New Historicist literary criticism, postmodern social theory, and Nietzchean aesthetics. They illustrate this method by reviewing recent scholarship of two kinds: First, they explore how legal disputes take on expressive meaning for parties and observers against the background of legal norms regulating or recognizing identities. Second, they examine readings of the representations of character, credit, and value in commercial and financial law tha...
For legal scholars it is the best of times. We are inundated by an eclectic range of writing that pu...
Critical Legal Studies and Legal Practice : The Concept of Legal Culture and of Law Practice as Cult...
“In the past century, we studied the law from within. The jurists of today are studying it from wit...
It is by now something of a truism that the abstract and conceptual modes of discourse that have dom...
Is a cultural study of the law possible? Of course it is: Law is part of culture, and its discourse ...
In this chapter I briefly map the terrain of a set of scholarly approaches that could be called a cu...
In this chapter I briefly map the terrain of a set of scholarly approaches that could be called a cu...
In this chapter I briefly map the terrain of a set of scholarly approaches that could be called a cu...
In America, law is a cultural practice, a type of social activity that generates a complete world of...
This Essay is an attempt to theorize the relationship of law to culture and culture to law beyond th...
In an era of globalization, culture is sometimes treated as a dirty word. For those who see the wo...
It is by now something of a truism that the abstract and conceptual modes of discourse that have dom...
This highly interdisciplinary reference work brings together diverse fields including cultural studi...
This highly interdisciplinary reference work brings together diverse fields including cultural studi...
For legal scholars it is the best of times. We are inundated by an eclectic range of writing that pu...
For legal scholars it is the best of times. We are inundated by an eclectic range of writing that pu...
Critical Legal Studies and Legal Practice : The Concept of Legal Culture and of Law Practice as Cult...
“In the past century, we studied the law from within. The jurists of today are studying it from wit...
It is by now something of a truism that the abstract and conceptual modes of discourse that have dom...
Is a cultural study of the law possible? Of course it is: Law is part of culture, and its discourse ...
In this chapter I briefly map the terrain of a set of scholarly approaches that could be called a cu...
In this chapter I briefly map the terrain of a set of scholarly approaches that could be called a cu...
In this chapter I briefly map the terrain of a set of scholarly approaches that could be called a cu...
In America, law is a cultural practice, a type of social activity that generates a complete world of...
This Essay is an attempt to theorize the relationship of law to culture and culture to law beyond th...
In an era of globalization, culture is sometimes treated as a dirty word. For those who see the wo...
It is by now something of a truism that the abstract and conceptual modes of discourse that have dom...
This highly interdisciplinary reference work brings together diverse fields including cultural studi...
This highly interdisciplinary reference work brings together diverse fields including cultural studi...
For legal scholars it is the best of times. We are inundated by an eclectic range of writing that pu...
For legal scholars it is the best of times. We are inundated by an eclectic range of writing that pu...
Critical Legal Studies and Legal Practice : The Concept of Legal Culture and of Law Practice as Cult...
“In the past century, we studied the law from within. The jurists of today are studying it from wit...