Close readings of popular culture texts can illuminate the complexities of the narratives of law and justice that influence our legal imaginary, and provide a means for re-reading our concepts of legality. This article explores Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight Trilogy not as a depiction of a traditional superhero who conservatively operates to supplement the legal system's goal of justice and restore the social order disrupted by criminals, villains or some other extraordinary threat, but as a non-hero who proposes a critique of justice and legality itself. It reads Batman as a Christological figure specifically because of his actions at the conclusion of the second film, The Dark Knight, in taking the blame for the murders committed by ...
The Dark Knight Trilogy, directed by Christopher Nolan, while at first glance a mere fantasy story a...
The primary focus of my presentation will be to explore the relationship between DC superheroes and ...
This thesis unpacks the identification and attraction in which Two-Face and The Joker\ud elicit in C...
Envisioning Legality: Law, Culture and Representation is a path-breaking collection of some of the w...
From Star Trek to Star Wars, popular culture is replete with images and signs of what might be calle...
Book synopsis: This book opens up a range of important perspectives on law and violence by consideri...
Batman is allied with modern natural law in the way he relies upon reason to bring about his vision ...
This essay aims to discuss the symptomatic aspects of 9/11 in Christopher Nolans The Dark Knight (20...
Director Christopher Nolan’s 2008 film,The Dark Knight, exposes the imbalance between the legal syst...
This is a film review of The Dark Knight Rises (2012) directed by Christopher Nolan
Blog post, “The Dark Knight and Hallowed Secularism“ discusses politics, theology and the law in rel...
In this thesis, I will be exploring and developing the character of Batman as he is portrayed in the...
Superhero narratives have always been deeply entangled with questions of justice, and their characte...
Batman is allied with modern natural law in the way he relies upon reason to bring about his vision ...
Christopher Nolan\u27s Batman trilogy in film, i.e., Batman Begins(2005), The Dark Knight(2008), and...
The Dark Knight Trilogy, directed by Christopher Nolan, while at first glance a mere fantasy story a...
The primary focus of my presentation will be to explore the relationship between DC superheroes and ...
This thesis unpacks the identification and attraction in which Two-Face and The Joker\ud elicit in C...
Envisioning Legality: Law, Culture and Representation is a path-breaking collection of some of the w...
From Star Trek to Star Wars, popular culture is replete with images and signs of what might be calle...
Book synopsis: This book opens up a range of important perspectives on law and violence by consideri...
Batman is allied with modern natural law in the way he relies upon reason to bring about his vision ...
This essay aims to discuss the symptomatic aspects of 9/11 in Christopher Nolans The Dark Knight (20...
Director Christopher Nolan’s 2008 film,The Dark Knight, exposes the imbalance between the legal syst...
This is a film review of The Dark Knight Rises (2012) directed by Christopher Nolan
Blog post, “The Dark Knight and Hallowed Secularism“ discusses politics, theology and the law in rel...
In this thesis, I will be exploring and developing the character of Batman as he is portrayed in the...
Superhero narratives have always been deeply entangled with questions of justice, and their characte...
Batman is allied with modern natural law in the way he relies upon reason to bring about his vision ...
Christopher Nolan\u27s Batman trilogy in film, i.e., Batman Begins(2005), The Dark Knight(2008), and...
The Dark Knight Trilogy, directed by Christopher Nolan, while at first glance a mere fantasy story a...
The primary focus of my presentation will be to explore the relationship between DC superheroes and ...
This thesis unpacks the identification and attraction in which Two-Face and The Joker\ud elicit in C...