PERHAPS A GIFT VOUCHER FOR MUM?: MOTHER'S DAY

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English
Oxford University Press
08 November 2023
A judge springs out of his car on the way to court in downtown Chicago and takes photographs of an inflatable rat. A while later he inserts these photographs into a decision involving another insufflated rodent used in a union protest. The increasing use of images in case law and precedent in the common law world provides a novel visual atlas of how lawyers see. Using a corpus of many images drawn from decisions in different common law jurisdictions across the globe, Judicial Uses of Images catalogues, analyzes, and reviews the normative significance and affective force of this new medium of legal expression and judgement. The remediation of law is critically dissected in the terms of the emergent optical criteria and protocols of retinal justice..

By:  
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 240mm,  Width: 162mm,  Spine: 20mm
Weight:   668g
ISBN:   9780192848772
ISBN 10:   0192848771
Series:   Law and Literature
Pages:   304
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Peter Goodrich was founding Dean and Corporation of London Professor of Law at Birkbeck College, University of London. He is Professor of Law and Director of the Programme in Law and Humanities at Cardozo School of Law New York, and Visiting Professor of Legal Studies, School of Social Science, New York University Abu Dhabi. Author of numerous books on legal theory, semiotics of law, law and literature, and the art of law, his most recent works include Legal Emblems and the Art of Law (Cambridge University Press, 2014), Schreber's Law (Edinburgh University Press, 2020), and Advanced Introduction to Law and Literature (Elgar, 2021).

Reviews for Judicial Uses of Images: Vision in Decision

The 'corpus' or 'body' of law is a visual image. This is in some tension with the common notion of jurisprudence as 'black letter' or flatly textual. This magnificent new book interrogates that seeming paradox: how does it challenge our notion of governance to acknowledge that law 'appears' as much as it is 'written'? Our fluidly associational apprehension of what Goodrich aptly dubs law's 'relay of optical forms' is worthy of study in an age when consciousness is ever more captured by the ungoverned chatter of photos, videos, and the hieroglyphs of emojis. Goodrich's brilliant—and brilliantly hilarious—account addresses how the assumed frames of law's landscape are both expanded and ruptured by the sensuousness of unruly scopic power. * Patricia J. Williams, University Distinguished Professor of Law and Humanities, Northeastern University *


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