All Stories

  1. ‘A Beautiful Fiction of Law’: Rhetorical Engagements withTerra Nulliusin the British Periodical Press in the 1840s
  2. Music and Legal Cultures
  3. Continuing Professional Education in Legal Ethics through Literature: An Example Using Dickens's Bleak House
  4. The fence in Australian short fiction: ‘a constant crossing of boundaries’?
  5. Law and identity at the fence
  6. A Critical Introduction to Law and Literature
  7. Continuing Negotiations: Law and Literature in Short Stories by Louis Auchincloss
  8. THE TRANSFIGURATIONS OF CAROLINE NORTON
  9. Fiction and the Law
  10. A Woman's Pleading: Caroline Norton's Pamphlets on Laws for Women in Nineteenth-Century England
  11. Notes
  12. Preface
  13. Law's language
  14. Literature under the law
  15. Conclusion
  16. Notes
  17. Bibliography
  18. Law
  19. Narrative forms and normative worlds
  20. The modern Western nomos
  21. Settling out of court
  22. Renaissance humanism and the new culture of contract
  23. Crime and punishment in the eighteenth century
  24. The woman question in Victorian England
  25. The common law and the ache of modernism
  26. Race and representation in contemporary America
  27. True testimony and the foundation of nomos – The Heart of Midlothian
  28. Reformist critique in the mid-Victorian “legal novel” – Bleak House
  29. Representation, inheritance and anti-reformism in the “legal novel” – Orley Farm
  30. Power, chance and the rule of law – Billy Budd, Sailor
  31. From sympathetic criminal to imperial law-giver – Lord Jim
  32. Introduction to law and literature: walking the boundary with Robert Frost and the Supreme Court
  33. Rumpole in Africa: law and literature in post-colonial society
  34. Freedom, uncertainty and diversity – the critique of imperialist law in A Passage to India