Do law and literature really have anything to say
to each other? Until now, that threshold question has
vexed law and literature studies. This revolutionary
work provides a bold new answer, showing how law and
literature spring from the same cultural impulses.
Drawing on the archetypal criticism of Northrop Frye,
the book takes a unique, quasi-scientific approach to
the subject, covering both law in literature and law as
literature. The Structures of Law and Literature moves
beyond the works usually studied in the field (Charles
Dickens, Franz Kafka, Herman Melville, Harper Lee) to
consider traditional ballads, the biblical narratives of
Moses and Job, literature from South Africa and France,
as well as works in Yiddish and Hebrew, the poetry of
W.B. Yeats, stories by John Updike, John Mortimer, and
John Sayles, Scottish nationalist writing by James
Kelman, the golem legend from the Talmud to modern
novels, and more. It also investigates legalese as a
dialect in a universe of its own making, provides a
concise summary of the entire method proposed, and
concludes with essays on selected works that render the
method's application particularly graphic. Original and
systematically argued, The Structures of Law and
Literature is a provocative work that adds new
dimensions to the cultural interplay of law and the
humanities.
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