Introduction to Littoral Readings: Representation of Land and Sea in Law, Literature, and Geography
Date
2015
Authors
van Rijswijk, Honni
Manderson, Desmond
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of California Press
Abstract
This essay introduces a collection of new work that addresses law, literature, and geography. Organized around the relationship between land
and sea, and in that sense building on the book of that title by Carl Schmitt, the collection recognizes the importance of geographic spatial phenomena in
the contours of our literature, and as these play out in legal concepts. But we need to pay attention to the particular contours of this relation, the highly
specific - indeed incorrigibly plural - forms and fantasies such a relationship takes in specific places and concerning specific jurisprudential issues. The
first axis involves recognizing the role of the imaginary in transforming social and legal conditions, and in delineating legal responsibility. The second axis
invites us to recognize how closely connected are legal structures and practices to the material experience of concrete spaces and environments. The fictional nature of literature, the non-fictional nature of geography, and the normative nature of law are constantly refracting each other. The way to
understand law as culture is to see how its modes and strategies pass through literature and the imaginary on the one hand, by way of geography
and the material on the other. In this essay and the collection that it introduces, the particularities of Australia - its law, its geography, and its literature
- are used as case studies through which to develop this interdisciplinary methodology.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Law and Literature
Type
Journal article
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31
Downloads
File
Description