Focus: Shakespeare and the law |
Weak kings and perverted symbolism. How Shakespeare treats the doctrine of the king's two bodies |
Free will and folly in As yu like it |
Romeo and Juliet: the importance of a name |
Unrelieble sources for law: dying declarations Shakespeare's King John, Othello and King Lear |
Disruptions and negotiations of identity in Act 1 of Shakespeare's Othello |
Ilegal search and seizure, due process, and the right of accused: the voice of power in the rethoric of Los Angeles police chief William H. Parker |
The judge's voice: literary and legal emblemata |
Power and the trial: the tension between voices and silence |
Voice, authority and the law in Peter Carey's True history of the Kelly gang |
Silence, power and the suicide in Michel Cunningham's The hours |
Celsus and Chtawin go walkabout |
Representing the unrepresentable: making law anyway? |
Gary Watt, Dress, law and the naked truth. A culural study of fashion and form [recensione] |
José Calvo Gonzales, Direito curvo [recensione] |