On the view that it is high time to return to our European humanistic roots of Law and Literature rather than be largely concerned with the academic work done in the US and the UK, whence the Law and Literature movement originates, such reconsideration is relevant because in the early modern period the separation of fields of knowledge into disciplines had not yet developed and monodisciplinarity as we have known it since the late nineteenth century was not an isue; law was seen as part and parcel of the humanities, and literary works operated as sources for law. This speaks for a return to the literatures of the early modern period. Claiming that humanist jurisprudence in the Dutch Republic of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries deserv...
The topic of the thesis is the connection of the renowned bard and writer William Shakespeare with t...
According to common sense, a book is only a way of conveying communicative contents (namely, ideas):...
In “Law and Literature Redux? Some Remarks on the Importance of the Legal Imagination,” Jeanne Gaake...
This dissertation examines early modern literary engagements with the rhetorical and ethical dimensi...
The judiciary in Dutch literature Building on the idea, proposed by John Wigmore and elaborated upon...
2016-07-16In early modern England, two equally powerful legal epistemologies existed. Leading lawyer...
The context provided by an AALS panel on Law and Humanities, organized by Jessica Silbey under the t...
Issues of slavery and slave law were of considerable theoretical interest to continental European ju...
The presence of moral theology and scholasticism in the recently published Oxford Handbook of Legal ...
The period of the Enlightenment was marked by innovation in political, cultural, religious, and educ...
The connection between law and (imaginative) literature can still affect surprisingly. The theme of ...
In early modern moral and political philosophy, the term “natural law” referred to a universal moral...
In 1930, Judge Learned Hand, widely regarded as one of the most distinguished judges in our nation\u...
Although the sheer technicality of the law’s concepts and categories often inhibits any discussion ...
Law and Literature movement has been developing in western countries since the first half of the twe...
The topic of the thesis is the connection of the renowned bard and writer William Shakespeare with t...
According to common sense, a book is only a way of conveying communicative contents (namely, ideas):...
In “Law and Literature Redux? Some Remarks on the Importance of the Legal Imagination,” Jeanne Gaake...
This dissertation examines early modern literary engagements with the rhetorical and ethical dimensi...
The judiciary in Dutch literature Building on the idea, proposed by John Wigmore and elaborated upon...
2016-07-16In early modern England, two equally powerful legal epistemologies existed. Leading lawyer...
The context provided by an AALS panel on Law and Humanities, organized by Jessica Silbey under the t...
Issues of slavery and slave law were of considerable theoretical interest to continental European ju...
The presence of moral theology and scholasticism in the recently published Oxford Handbook of Legal ...
The period of the Enlightenment was marked by innovation in political, cultural, religious, and educ...
The connection between law and (imaginative) literature can still affect surprisingly. The theme of ...
In early modern moral and political philosophy, the term “natural law” referred to a universal moral...
In 1930, Judge Learned Hand, widely regarded as one of the most distinguished judges in our nation\u...
Although the sheer technicality of the law’s concepts and categories often inhibits any discussion ...
Law and Literature movement has been developing in western countries since the first half of the twe...
The topic of the thesis is the connection of the renowned bard and writer William Shakespeare with t...
According to common sense, a book is only a way of conveying communicative contents (namely, ideas):...
In “Law and Literature Redux? Some Remarks on the Importance of the Legal Imagination,” Jeanne Gaake...