“visual meaning making”

Richard K. Sherwin: Visualizing Law in the Age of the Digital Baroque: Arabesques and Entanglements. (Discourses of Law) Abingdon, Oxon ; New York: Routledge 2011.

Verlagsanzeige (inkl. ToC / Varia): “Visualizing Law in the Age of the Digital Baroque explores the profound impact that visual digital technologies are having on the practice and theory of law. Today, lawyers, judges, and lay jurors face a vast array of visual evidence and visual argument. From videos documenting crimes and accidents to computer displays of their digital simulation, increasingly, the search for fact-based justice inside the courtroom is becoming an offshoot of visual meaning making. But when law migrates to the screen it lives there as other images do, motivating belief and judgment on the basis of visual delight and unconscious fantasies and desires as well as actualities. Law as image also shares broader cultural anxieties concerning not only the truth of the image but also the mimetic capacity itself, the human ability to represent reality. What is real, and what is simulation? This is the hallmark of the baroque, when dreams fold into dreams, like immersion in a seemingly endless matrix of digital appearances. When fact-based justice recedes, laws proliferate within a field of uncertainty. Left unchecked, this condition of ontological and ethical uneasiness threatens the legitimacy of law’s claim to power. Visualizing Law in the Age of the Digital Baroque offers a jurisprudential paradigm that is equal to the challenge that current cultural conditions present”.

Dazu gibt’s eine Konferenz an der New York Law School.

Und weil ich grad dabei bin, noch einen Titel zu Law-and-Lit:

William P. MacNeil: Novel Judgements: Legal Theory as Fiction. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY: Routledge 2011.

Verlagsanzeige (inkl. ToC / Varia: “Novel Judgements is a book about nineteenth century Anglo-American law and literature. But by redefining law as legal theory, Novel judgements departs from ‘socio-legal’ studies of law and literature, often dated in their focus on past lawyering and court processes. This texts ‘theoretical turn’ renders the period’s ‘law-and-literature’ relevant to today’s readers because the nineteenth century novel, when “read jurisprudentially”, abounds in representations of law’s controlling concepts, many of which are still with us today. Rights, justice, law’s morality; each are encoded novelistically in stock devices such as the country house, friendship, love, courtship and marriage. In so rendering the public (law) as private (domesticity), these novels expose for legal and literary scholars alike the ways in which law comes to mediate all relationships—individual and collective, personal and political—during the nineteenth century, a period as much under the Rule of Law as the reign of Capital. So these novels pass judgement—a novel judgement—on the extent to which the nineteenth century’s idea of law is collusive with that era’s Capital, thereby opening up the possibility of a new legal theoretical position: that of a critique of the law and a law of critique”.

Verwandte Artikel:

  1. “Making Art from Evidence”
  2. Lex Populi
  3. Visual Literacy for Lawyers
  4. Law and Literature (Forschung)
  5. Making Heroes (Radio & Polizei, Forschung, USA)
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