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Focus: Robert Musil |
François Ost, Shakespeare. la comédie de la loi [recensione] |
Helle Porsdam and Thomas Elholm (eds.) Dialogues on justice: European perspectives on law and humanities [recensione] |
Lucia Rodler (ed.), Cesare Lombroso. L'uomo delinquente studiato in rapporto all'antropologia, alla medicina legale e alle discipline carcerarie [recensione] |
Moosbrugger: the genealogy of a demi-fou |
Peter Robson and Jessica Silbey (eds.). Law and justice on the small screen [recensione] |
Shakespeare against Genre |
The strange clauses of Dr. Jekyll's will: the body as its precondition and its legacy |
The subject before the law: on Robert Musil's broken fiction and narrative humanism within the law |
Understanding fact and fiction in Robert Musil's The man without qualities |
A white tiger in the Indian law jungle: a reading af Aravind Adiga's debut novel |
The churchyard in Wilkie Collin's The woman in white: issues of madness and illegitimacy |
Culture, language and environmental rights: the anthropocentrism of English |
David Johnston. A brief history of justice [recensione] |
Elisabetta Cecconi, The language of defendants in the 17th-century English courtroom [recensione] |
Finding The Guilty one: media sensorialism, defendant's performance, and jury equity |
Focus: Genealogies of laws and justices |
Gollum's sacredness and the geopolics of the self: reframing Tolkien's normative world |
The gothic picturesque garden and the historical sense |
Leif Dahlberg (ed.). Visualizing law and authority: essays on legal aesthetics [recensione] |
Metamorphosis of the ideals and the actuals: blasphemy laws in Pakistan and transplantation of justice in British India |
Modifyng the past: Nietschean approches to history |
Sovereignity, faith and the fall |
Sovereignity forever: the boundaries of Western medieval and modern thought in a quasi-symptomatic reading of Schmitt's definition of sovereignity |
Weeds in the gardens of justice? The survival of hyperpositivism in Polish legal culture as a symptom/sinthome |