All Stories

  1. Slippery and Plural: Collaborative Writing in Daphne Marlatt and Betsy Warland’s “Subject to Change” and “Reading and Writing Between the Lines”
  2. Introduction
  3. A CULTURE OF RIGHTS. Law, Literature, and Canada
  4. Human rights, interdisciplinarity and the time of utopia
  5. Power and Legitimacy: Law, Culture, and Literature by Anne Quéma
  6. The Crisis and the Quotidian in International Human Rights Law
  7. International Human Rights Law and the Language of Crisis
  8. Truth in the Telling: Procedure, Testimony, and the Work of Improvisation in Legal Narrative
  9. The Individual Is International: Discourses of the Personal in Catherine Bush'sThe Rules of EngagementandCanada's International Policy Statement
  10. Representation and suspicion in Canada’s appearance under the Universal Periodic Review