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Chapter 1. Law, Literature, and the Predicament of Representation
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements V
- Table of Contents VII
- Chapter 1. Law, Literature, and the Predicament of Representation 1
- Chapter 2. Legitimate Fictions: Rhetoric and Evidence in the Law-and-Literature Movement 33
- Chapter 3 Wieland ’s Testimony: Charles Brockden Brown and the Rhetoric of Evidence 76
- Chapter 4. The Judge and the Code: James Fenimore Cooper and the Common Law of Literature 120
- Chapter 5. Evidence and Identification: The Case(s) of To Kill a Mockingbird 174
- Chapter 6. Dissenting Opinions: William Gaddis, Alan Dershowitz, and the Spectacles of Media Justice 230
- Bibliography 274
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements V
- Table of Contents VII
- Chapter 1. Law, Literature, and the Predicament of Representation 1
- Chapter 2. Legitimate Fictions: Rhetoric and Evidence in the Law-and-Literature Movement 33
- Chapter 3 Wieland ’s Testimony: Charles Brockden Brown and the Rhetoric of Evidence 76
- Chapter 4. The Judge and the Code: James Fenimore Cooper and the Common Law of Literature 120
- Chapter 5. Evidence and Identification: The Case(s) of To Kill a Mockingbird 174
- Chapter 6. Dissenting Opinions: William Gaddis, Alan Dershowitz, and the Spectacles of Media Justice 230
- Bibliography 274