Is a cultural study of the law possible? Of course it is: Law is part of culture, and its discourse and social rituals can be studied in the manner of any other social practice. Cultural studies need to include the law, since law is a prime site in the creation of social enactments and rituals. As Guyora Binder and Robert Weisberg recently have claimed, law is both the means by which we continuously refashion society and one of the media in which we represent and critique what we have fashioned. But questions remain: What will be the status of this cultural study of the law? Will there be any reciprocal relation of cultural study to legal study? If Paul Kahn worries that cultural critique of the law tends to be recuperated to a reformist ...
In an era of globalization, culture is sometimes treated as a dirty word. For those who see the wo...
In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Recons...
What can law’s popular cultures do for law, as a constitutive and interrogative critical practice? ...
The notion of culture is everywhere invoked and virtually nowhere explained. Culture can mean so man...
“In the past century, we studied the law from within. The jurists of today are studying it from wit...
This Essay is an attempt to theorize the relationship of law to culture and culture to law beyond th...
Everywhere it seems that culture is in ascendance. More and more social groups are claiming to have ...
In America, law is a cultural practice, a type of social activity that generates a complete world of...
Professors Binder and Weisberg expound a cultural criticism of law that views law as an arena for ...
It is by now something of a truism that the abstract and conceptual modes of discourse that have dom...
Law has a dual capacity in the field of culture: it enables the formation of subjects and of cultura...
In an era of globalization, culture is sometimes treated as a dirty word. For those who see the wo...
In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Recons...
Everywhere it seems that culture is in ascendance. More and more social groups are claiming to have ...
Emerging from the uptake of popular cultural studies by legal scholars, and in response to the tradi...
In an era of globalization, culture is sometimes treated as a dirty word. For those who see the wo...
In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Recons...
What can law’s popular cultures do for law, as a constitutive and interrogative critical practice? ...
The notion of culture is everywhere invoked and virtually nowhere explained. Culture can mean so man...
“In the past century, we studied the law from within. The jurists of today are studying it from wit...
This Essay is an attempt to theorize the relationship of law to culture and culture to law beyond th...
Everywhere it seems that culture is in ascendance. More and more social groups are claiming to have ...
In America, law is a cultural practice, a type of social activity that generates a complete world of...
Professors Binder and Weisberg expound a cultural criticism of law that views law as an arena for ...
It is by now something of a truism that the abstract and conceptual modes of discourse that have dom...
Law has a dual capacity in the field of culture: it enables the formation of subjects and of cultura...
In an era of globalization, culture is sometimes treated as a dirty word. For those who see the wo...
In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Recons...
Everywhere it seems that culture is in ascendance. More and more social groups are claiming to have ...
Emerging from the uptake of popular cultural studies by legal scholars, and in response to the tradi...
In an era of globalization, culture is sometimes treated as a dirty word. For those who see the wo...
In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Recons...
What can law’s popular cultures do for law, as a constitutive and interrogative critical practice? ...