This book considers how law is always enacted, or performed, in ways that can be analyzed in relation to fiction, theatre, and other dramatic forms.
Of necessity, lawyers and judges need to devise techniques to make rules respond situationally. The performance of law supplements, or it extends the reach of, the law-as-written. And, in this respect, the act of lawyering is in many ways an instantiation of acts often associated with, for example, literature and the plastic and performing arts. Combining legal theory and legal practice, this book maintains that the modes of enquiry found in, and applied to, novels, paintings, and plays can help us understand how things like legal arguments and trials work—or don’t. As such, and through the examination of a wide range of both historical and fictional legal cases, the book pursues an interdisciplinary analysis of how law is performed; and, moreover, how legal performances can be accomplished ethically.
This book will appeal to scholars and students in sociolegal studies, legal theory, and jurisprudence, as well as those teaching and training in legal practice.
Introduction, Overview of Book, 1. Fiction as a Mode of Justice, 2. Institutionalizing Exemplary Narratives: Stories as Models for and Movers of Law, 3. Law and Its Places of Performance, 4. Law-as-Performance, 5. Legal Narratives Performed and Imagined, 6. What is a Virtuous Lawyer? Adventures in Interpretation, A Conclusion without Closure