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“… and if, in time, equity…”. An Exploration of the Time(s) of Equity Diagrammed through Image

  • Anne Bottomley (Emerita, School of Law, University of Kent) has taught and researched in the areas of property and equity and trusts for many years. Her publications include (ed. with Hilary Lim) Feminist Perspectives on Land Law, and a number of papers (many with Nathan Moore) using film, art, architecture and music to explore and develop alternative approaches to critical theory and law.

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Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 7. September 2016
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Pólemos
Aus der Zeitschrift Pólemos Band 10 Heft 2

Abstract

How can equity (in relation to common law) be thought or rather imaged? Drawing on Serres’s topographical account of time, it is suggested that equity carries (and contributes to law) accounts of time beyond the lineal timeframe familiar to common law, thereby enriching not only the temporal but also the spatial reach of law, a fundamental contribution to the development of sophisticated legal designs for property and commercial law serving early capital. The argument is traced in (teased out from) a Deleuzean use of image to diagram potentials for new engagements with thinking and practicing equity, a celebration of the role of the artisan (here as baker).

About the author

Anne Bottomley

Anne Bottomley (Emerita, School of Law, University of Kent) has taught and researched in the areas of property and equity and trusts for many years. Her publications include (ed. with Hilary Lim) Feminist Perspectives on Land Law, and a number of papers (many with Nathan Moore) using film, art, architecture and music to explore and develop alternative approaches to critical theory and law.

Published Online: 2016-9-7
Published in Print: 2016-9-1

©2016 by De Gruyter

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