How should a deconstructionist go about reviewing Judge Richard Posner\u27s new book, Law and Literature: A Misunderstood Relation? As Judge Posner tells us, deconstructionists take an ostensibly serious prose passage and immediately get hung up on the first word, which may be an unintended pun or a homonym or a false cognate or may contain a subordinate meaning ... at war with the surface meaning (at 213). Indeed, deconstructionists do much worse things. They deliberately look for the marginal, the obscure, the disregarded in texts (and in thought), believing that this will shed light on the problems of a text, its blindnesses, or its ideological presuppositions
The question of why judges are concerned with justifying or defending their decisions from the follo...
The world is complex, Richard Posner observes in his most recent book, Reflections on Judging. It fo...
The process by which we represent our society\u27s will and welfare in the medium of law is an imagi...
Richard Posner\u27s new book, Law and Literature: A Misunderstood Relation, is a defense of “liberal...
Deconstruction began as a series of techniques invented by Jacques Derrida, Paul de Man, and others ...
Judge Posner\u27s recent book, Law and Literature: A Misunderstood Relation, has already attracted c...
Judge Richard A. Posner has expanded the scope of his writing. We have previously known him as one o...
Book review: Law & Literature: A Misunderstood Relation. By Richard A. Posner. Cambridge: Harvard Un...
Deconstructive readers are interested in ironies, aporias, paradoxes, contradictions, conflicts, par...
This Article examines the treatment of deconstruction in United States judicial opinions.\u27 A hand...
Since it is imposed to thinking, deconstruction can be seen as a law, the Law itself. Deconstruction...
At a time when many departments of literature are discounting literary criticism and scholarship in ...
The purpose of this Article is to introduce legal readers to the ideas of the French philosopher Jac...
The collected essays in Postmodern Jurisprudence seek to apply postmodernist theories, and in partic...
An examination of how/if the work of Jacques Derrida can be used as an aid to judicial interpretatio...
The question of why judges are concerned with justifying or defending their decisions from the follo...
The world is complex, Richard Posner observes in his most recent book, Reflections on Judging. It fo...
The process by which we represent our society\u27s will and welfare in the medium of law is an imagi...
Richard Posner\u27s new book, Law and Literature: A Misunderstood Relation, is a defense of “liberal...
Deconstruction began as a series of techniques invented by Jacques Derrida, Paul de Man, and others ...
Judge Posner\u27s recent book, Law and Literature: A Misunderstood Relation, has already attracted c...
Judge Richard A. Posner has expanded the scope of his writing. We have previously known him as one o...
Book review: Law & Literature: A Misunderstood Relation. By Richard A. Posner. Cambridge: Harvard Un...
Deconstructive readers are interested in ironies, aporias, paradoxes, contradictions, conflicts, par...
This Article examines the treatment of deconstruction in United States judicial opinions.\u27 A hand...
Since it is imposed to thinking, deconstruction can be seen as a law, the Law itself. Deconstruction...
At a time when many departments of literature are discounting literary criticism and scholarship in ...
The purpose of this Article is to introduce legal readers to the ideas of the French philosopher Jac...
The collected essays in Postmodern Jurisprudence seek to apply postmodernist theories, and in partic...
An examination of how/if the work of Jacques Derrida can be used as an aid to judicial interpretatio...
The question of why judges are concerned with justifying or defending their decisions from the follo...
The world is complex, Richard Posner observes in his most recent book, Reflections on Judging. It fo...
The process by which we represent our society\u27s will and welfare in the medium of law is an imagi...