Law & Humanities Blog |
Posted: 29 Mar 2011 12:26 PM PDT Some new titles of interest from Routledge (abstracts from the publisher's catalog) Jacques de Ville, Jacques Derrida: Law as Absolute Hospitality (due August 2011). Law and Art: Ethics, Aesthetics, Justice (Ed. Oren Ben-Dor). (published March 2011). The contributions to Law and Art address the interaction between law, justice, the ethical and the aesthetic. The exercise of the legal role and the scholarly understanding of legal texts were classically defined as ars iuris – an art of law – which drew on the panoply of humanist disciplines, from philology to fine art. That tradition has fallen by the wayside, particularly in the wake of modernism. But, as this book demonstrates, aDeidre Pribram, Emotions, Genre, and Justice in Film and Television (published March, 2011). Through their cultural meanings and uses, emotions enable social identities to be created and contested, toMichael Salter, Carl Schmitt: Law as Politics, Ideology and Strategic Myth (due October 2011). There has been and continues to be a remarkable revival in academic interest in Carl Schmitt's thought within politics, but this is the first book to address his thought from an explicitly legal theoretical perspective. Transcending the prevailing one-sided and purely historical focus on Schmitt's significance for debates that took place in the Weimar Republic 1919-1933, this book addresses the actual and potential significance of Schmitt's thought for debates within contemporary Anglo-American legal theory that have emerged during the past three decades. |
These include: the critique of legal positivism; the 'indeterminacy thesis' of American Critical Legal Studies; the reinterpretation of law as a form of strategically disguised politics by the contemporary sociology of law movement; the emphasis upon law as implicated in, and as aspect of, a network of mobile yet dispersed power relationships irreducible to a central state; the legal theoretical critique of human rights and liberalism more generally; Schmitt's critique of innovations within international criminal law: the inhumanity and hypocrisy of supposedly universalistic 'crimes against humanity'; and the retrospective criminalisation of 'aggressive war' as part of the Nuremberg trials process. In these respects, therefore, Michael Salter provides an overview and assessment of Schmitt's thought, as well as a consideration of its relevance for contemporary legal thought.
Veronique Voruz, Foucault and Criminology: An Introduction (due April, 2011).
Veronique Voruz, Foucault and Criminology: An Introduction (due April, 2011).
[p]rovides an introduction to Michel Foucault, written from the perspective of criminology's engagement with his work. Foucault's writing has become a central reference in theoretical and sociological criminology generally and, more specifically, in what Jock Young has called 'control theory'. The main purpose of this book is to offer a better, clearer and deeper understanding of ongoing criminological debates to both undergraduate and research students in criminology by outlining the theoretical framework which criminologists have taken from Foucault. Its second purpose is to trace the evolution of Foucault's political project and to counterpose the thrust of his elaborations to the more pedestrian applications of his critical analyses of the present in the field of criminology. In these respects, Foucault and Criminology offers a 'map' to guide students and practitioners of criminology: both through Foucault's own writings and those of contemporary criminologists whose work may be characterised as Foucauldian. In so doing, it also pursues the argument that Foucault's historical and theoretical analyses of discipline, power and governance must be understood in the context of his overall project if criminologists are to avoid reducing Foucault's radicality, and to reclaim the critical, and resistive, potential of his work.
Bob Dylan and the Law: Take It From the Top
Posted: 29 Mar 2011 10:18 AM PDT
The blog Nightly Song has an interesting post on Bob Dylan and Law, seeming to take its cue from the Bob Dylan and Law conference post here several days ago). The poster notes and comments on several Dylan songs that discuss, lament or rail against the law and justice. Several commenters also chime in with their takes on Dylan songs.
Posted: 29 Mar 2011 08:23 AM PDT
Fernando Estrada, Universidad Externado de Colombia, Facultadad de Finanzas, Gobierno y Relaciones Internacionales, and Boris Salazar, Universidad del Valle have published Brains that Make Revolutions. Here is the abstract.
This paper work assesses the key aspects of a framework for research on revolutions. Our approach includes a heuristic based on an idea suggested by Marx in the 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte: "The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brain of the living." From this maxim of Marx advance on conventional interpretations by postulating that the language and metaphors are a challenge in several respects: (1) The brain is a physical basis for understanding key political revolutions, (2) advances in neuroscience and language (Lakoff/Johnson/Narayanan) have allowed the reconstruction of conceptual frameworks in various fields, including philosophy, mathematics and politics (3) The language expressed in songs, text, flags, emblems, illustrations, slogans, speeches and rumors is key to represent and demonstrate loyalty to the idea of revolution and, more crucially, to "make" the revolution, (4) Metaphors are a powerful rational action in revolutionary processes. One interpretation of these can contribute to decipher, for example, how the brain are activated in neural systems that link past and present, how to operate the symbolic frameworks of language to influence political opinion, how metaphors interact with processes artificial simulation or how metaphors evolve in a revolution from simple metaphors.Download the paper from SSRN at the link.
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