Jeanne Gaakeer and Francois Ost eds., Crossing Borders: law, language and literature, Wolf Legal Publishers, The Netherlands, 2008.
Table of Contents:
- Introduction by Jeanne Gaakeer and Francois Ost
- Part I: Interrelations of law, language and literature
- Law and Literature: an analysis of Sophocles’ Antigone and Shakespeare’s
- The Merchant of Venice, by Marcelo Campos Galuppo
- Utopian capabilities: on critical legal thinking and Cervantes’ Don Quixote, by Jom Reinhard
- Kafka, kavka, K: the case of a hyphenated identity, by Vera Karam de Chueiri
- Law and essays (cronicas): the enchanting soul of the streets, by Monica Sette Lopes
- Comprehending Contraries or Doublethink?Law, literature and the dangers of cognitive dissonance, by Jeanne Gaakeer
- On Law and Literature: dimensions and limits of a controversial relationship, by Marcelino Rodrìguez Molinero
- Thought and Art in Hispanic Tradition of Legal Literature: aesthetic keys for legal interpretation, by Héctor Lòpez Bello
- Investigative Literature- Bertolt Brecht revisited, by Lorenz Schulz
- Hellenism and Hebraism: legal traditions and the work of Cynthia Ozick, by James Gray
- Part II: New Perspectives
- Hyperliterature and Law, Unity of Text, Diversity of Readings, by Andreij Kristan
- A Little Place Before the Law: Two tales of one metaphor, by Maria Aristodemou
- Sade and Portalis at the foot of the Scaffold, an example of jurisfiction, by Francois Ost
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