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Law's Guilt about Literature

Baron, Jane B.
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2005-06-06
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https://doi.org/10.1016/S1059-4337(05)36002-9
Abstract
This essay addresses the theme of guilt in law and literature from the law side. It argues that the legal academy's flirtation with literature reflects two forms of guilty uneasiness. The first relates to the question whether lawyers should be reading literature at all. This is a methodological anxiety. It presumes a distinctly legal method of analyzing legal issues, in which literature does not have a truly legitimate role. The second anxiety is substantive. It presumes that law has an identifiable content, one that excludes much that appears in literature. Both presumptions are, I argue, questionable and make sense only if law is viewed as primarily doctrinal. Fundamentally, these varieties of uneasiness have their roots in the still unresolved conceptual challenge of figuring precisely what is “interdisciplinary” about the law and literature enterprise. Developing an honest form of “interdisciplinarity” will be difficult if not impossible because it requires an examination of usually unstated assumptions about the uniqueness of law.
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Jane B. Baron, Law's Guilt about Literature, in Toward a Critique of Guilt: Perspectives from Law and the Humanities, Volume 36 17 (Matthew Anderson, ed., 2005).
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© 2005 by Elsevier Ltd. This AAM is provided for your own personal use only. It may not be used for resale, reprinting, systematic distribution, emailing, or for any other commercial purpose without the permission of the publisher.
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Chapter appears in: Toward a Critique of Guilt: Perspectives from Law and the Humanities, Volume 36, (Matthew Anderson, ed., 2005).
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