This essay considers the different ways in which law professors and English professors teach courses in Law and Literature -- particularly the differences in the course materials and the analytic approaches used in understanding those materials. Courses taught on law faculties generally include fewer readings drawn from case law and legal theory. On the other hand, courses taught in English departments are more likely to emphasize similarities between the legal readings and works of fiction or drama. I discuss some of the disciplinary habits that make it difficult for faculty members in each area to come to terms with materials taken from another discipline, but I end by arguing that these barriers are not insurmountable and can even be add...
Austin Sarat reminds us that law is part of The Humanities and that the study of law could be situ...
In this paper I wish to look at the relation between law and literature from the point of view of th...
One of the major challenges for the teaching process is to give a course of a given discipline away ...
This essay considers the different ways in which law professors and English professors teach courses...
The article discusses how the study of literature can contribute to a law student's legal education ...
This special issue on the New Literary Analysis of Law features articles that dispense with the choi...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
The idea of academic "discipline" has a long and venerable history, reaching back to the Renaissance...
Some of the central issues addressed at the 2009 Mercer Law Review Symposium Celebrating the 25th A...
Law and Literature courses are intended, at least in part, to supply the sound moral understanding a...
The following essay is based on the talk Law and Literature : Examining the Limited Legal Imaginati...
With what hopes and expectations should a lawyer turn to the reading of imaginative literature? To b...
The context provided by an AALS panel on Law and Humanities, organized by Jessica Silbey under the t...
The Anglo-American claim prominent in Law and Literature for decades by now is that reading literatu...
Book synopsis: This book explores the many approaches available to the study of law and literature. ...
Austin Sarat reminds us that law is part of The Humanities and that the study of law could be situ...
In this paper I wish to look at the relation between law and literature from the point of view of th...
One of the major challenges for the teaching process is to give a course of a given discipline away ...
This essay considers the different ways in which law professors and English professors teach courses...
The article discusses how the study of literature can contribute to a law student's legal education ...
This special issue on the New Literary Analysis of Law features articles that dispense with the choi...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
The idea of academic "discipline" has a long and venerable history, reaching back to the Renaissance...
Some of the central issues addressed at the 2009 Mercer Law Review Symposium Celebrating the 25th A...
Law and Literature courses are intended, at least in part, to supply the sound moral understanding a...
The following essay is based on the talk Law and Literature : Examining the Limited Legal Imaginati...
With what hopes and expectations should a lawyer turn to the reading of imaginative literature? To b...
The context provided by an AALS panel on Law and Humanities, organized by Jessica Silbey under the t...
The Anglo-American claim prominent in Law and Literature for decades by now is that reading literatu...
Book synopsis: This book explores the many approaches available to the study of law and literature. ...
Austin Sarat reminds us that law is part of The Humanities and that the study of law could be situ...
In this paper I wish to look at the relation between law and literature from the point of view of th...
One of the major challenges for the teaching process is to give a course of a given discipline away ...