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Book Cover
E-book
Author Crotty, Kevin, author

Title Law's Interior : Legal and Literary Constructions of the Self / Kevin Crotty
Published Ithaca, NY : Cornell University Press, [2018]
©2001

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- CHAPTER 1. The Quest for Autonomy: Modern Jurisprudence and the Oresteia -- 1. AUTONOMY AS AN ASPIRATION -- 2. THE Oresteia AND THE DRAMA OF AUTONOMY -- 3. LAW AND THE POLITICS OF RECOGNITION -- 4. ON LAW AND LITERATURE -- CHAPTER 2. Dilemmas of the Self: Law and Confession -- 1. CONFESSION IN LAW AND THEORY -- 2. AUGUSTINE AND THE CONFESSING SELF -- 3. THE LIMITED STATE AND THE INTRICATE SELF -- 4. LAW AS PRACTICE -- CHAPTER 3. Rationality and Imagination in the Law: Jürgen Habermas and Wallace Stevens -- 1. THE RATIONALITY OF LAW -- 2. STEVENS ON EVIL -- 3. ON RIGHTS AND THE INDIVIDUAL -- 4. LAW AS AN "IMAGINATION OF THE NORMAL" -- Conclusion: Law's Interior -- Index
Summary In Law's Interior, Kevin M. Crotty draws on several important literary works to offer a new model of the relationship between citizens and their laws, one that emphasizes the power of law to shape citizens and to foster-or discourage-their autonomy. Crotty maintains that citizens are "inside" the law-they are the law's interior. Literature, he finds, can be relevant to law by emphasizing the connections between law and the world around it-a stance that corrects the tendency of legal theory to treat law as a separate, autonomous entity.The texts Crotty examines-Aeschylus' Oresteia, St. Augustine's Confessions, and the poetry of Wallace Stevens-question the rationalist optimism that Crotty regards as distorting much recent theorizing about law. Further, he asserts that the inability of courts to state clearly the principles animating their decisions demonstrates the stranglehold the positivist model has on us and our legal imaginations.Crotty sketches a model of the relation between citizens and laws that supplements the more familiar idea of law as something deliberated and enacted by rational, inherently autonomous citizens. The most important legal decisions of the past fifty years, Crotty says, rest on the perception that the state, far from merely respecting the "innate" autonomy of its citizens, actively shapes that autonomy. Law's Interior should contribute to a better understanding of the real principles underlying some landmark decisions by the Supreme Court
Notes In English
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Jan 2019)
Subject Autonomy (Psychology)
Law -- Philosophy.
Liberty.
Personality (Law)
Freedom
freedom.
LITERARY CRITICISM / Ancient & Classical.
Autonomy (Psychology)
Law -- Philosophy
Liberty
Personality (Law)
Selbst
Rechtsphilosophie
Autonomie (algemeen).
Literatuur.
Wetten.
Burgers.
Individualism -- Social aspects.
Liberty.
Autonomy (Psychology).
Personality (Law).
Law -- Philosophy.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781501723605
150172360X