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On Comics and Legal Aesthetics: Multimodality and the Haunted Mask of Knowing [Mīkstie vāki]

(St Mary's University College, Twickenham, UK)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 230 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g, 29 Halftones, black and white
  • Sērija : Discourses of Law
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Jul-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367404478
  • ISBN-13: 9780367404475
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 230 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g, 29 Halftones, black and white
  • Sērija : Discourses of Law
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Jul-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367404478
  • ISBN-13: 9780367404475
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

What are the implications of comics for law? Tackling this question, On Comics and Legal Aesthetics explores the epistemological dimensions of comics and the way this once-maligned medium can help think about – and reshape – the form of law. Traversing comics, critical, and cultural legal studies, it seeks to enrich the theorisation of comics with a critical aesthetics that expands its value and significance for law, as well as knowledge more generally. It argues that comics’ multimodality – its hybrid structure, which represents a meeting point of text, image, reason, and aesthetics – opens understanding of the limits of law’s rational texts by shifting between multiple frames and modes of presentation. Comics thereby exposes the way all forms of knowledge are shaped out of an unstructured universe, becoming a mask over this chaotic ‘beyond’. This mask of knowing remains haunted – by that which it can never fully capture or represent. Comics thus models knowledge as an infinity of nested frames haunted by the chaos without structure. In such a model, the multiple aspects of law become one region of a vast and bottomless cascade of perspectives – an infinite multiframe that extends far beyond the traditional confines of the comics page, rendering law boundless.

List of figures
ix
Acknowledgments xi
Preface xiii
1 On comics and other ways of knowing
1(27)
Drawing the frame
2(12)
Cultural legal aesthetics
2(4)
Comics and conscious legality
6(8)
Komos and nomos
14(14)
On the form of comics
14(6)
Law and the multiframe
20(8)
2 A ghostless machine
28(34)
Cyborg aesthetics
29(15)
Human/technology
29(8)
Ghosts and shells
37(7)
Disciplinary aesthetics
44(18)
Regulating the ghost
44(7)
Following the strings
51(11)
3 The irrational threat
62(35)
Madness and aesthetics
63(16)
Street bat, phenomenal city
63(7)
Into the Asylum
70(9)
Headless lawyers
79(18)
The maze that dreams
79(6)
Remember madness
85(12)
4 Horrific jurisprudence
97(42)
Call of the cultural-legal
98(16)
The horrific sublime
98(7)
New law of images
105(9)
Judging in the abyss
114(25)
The dread lawman
114(7)
Sleep of the jurist
121(18)
5 On haunted masks
139(32)
Masca lex
140(13)
Nostalgia
140(5)
Behind the mask
145(8)
Invisible images
153(18)
The watcher that judges
153(7)
Other scenes of judgment
160(11)
6 Redrawing the law
171(42)
Drawing the world
175(17)
Jurisdiction, mapping, knowing
175(11)
Of maps and monsters
186(6)
The haunted multiframe
192(21)
Towards a multimodal law
192(9)
Into the Dreaming
201(12)
Appendix A Details of comics discussed 213(9)
Appendix B Text from figures 222(3)
Index 225
Thomas Giddens is senior lecturer in law at St Marys University, Twickenham. He researches critical, comics, and cultural legal studies. He founded the Graphic Justice Research Alliance in 2013 and edited the collection Graphic Justice: Intersections of Comics and Law (Routledge 2015). He also edits the on-going Graphic Justice special collection at The Comics Grid: Journal of Comics Scholarship and is a founding Co-Director of St Marys Centre for Law and Culture.