Feminist Perspectives on Law and Literature
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Edited by:
Laura Schmitz-Justen
, Laura A. Zander , Hanna Luise Kroll and Laura Wittmann
About this book
The interdisciplinary study of law and literature can help us better understand intersectionality, and vice versa: intersectional feminist perspectives are extremely valuable in the study of law and literature. Of course, neither feminist nor intersectional approaches are new in and of themselves: for decades, literary scholarship has studied the impact of particular constellations of gender, race, and class when it comes to representations of women in literary texts and has succeeded in shaking monolithic and stereotypical notions of womanhood. However, research at the intersection of law, literature and feminism has so far been limited and insular. Bringing together more than twenty international researchers from related disciplines, this volume is the first to bring questions of intersectional feminism to the forefront of law and literature scholarship. From reproductive and (trans-)gender justice in law and literature to feminist practices that intervene in judicial discourse, this volume brings into focus a wide range of cultural and legal phenomena in which gender and the law intersect in literary texts. The volume’s commitment to intersectionality fittingly extents to its very make up: the contributors were selected to represent a diverse range of positions in terms of their gender, career stage and nationality.
Author / Editor information
Hanna Luise Kroll, CRC ‘Law and Literature’, University of Münster, Germany; Laura Schmitz-Justen, CRC ‘Law and Literature’, University of Münster, Germany; Laura Wittmann, CRC ‘Law and Literature’, University of Münster, Germany; Dr. Laura Zander, CRC ‘Law and Literature’, University of Münster, Germany.
Topics
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Frontmatter
I -
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Acknowledgements
V -
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Table of Contents
VII -
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Introduction
1 - 1 Analyzing Discrimination, Stereotypes, and Gender Roles
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Witches and Outlaws: Female Stereotypes in Dickens’s Dombey and Son
29 -
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Prescient Heroines and Patriarchal Legality in the Sensational 1860s: The Gendered Laws of Genre in Collins’s The Woman in White and Gordon Smythies’s A Faithful Woman
43 -
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Detection, Gender, and the Law in Peter Ackroyd’s The Trial of Elizabeth Cree
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Pastel Paratexts and Literary Expectations: Gendered Marketing Practices in the US Book Industry
75 - 2 Embodiment, Gender, and the Law
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“If only I didn’t have this REALITY inside me”: Abortion Law and Realities in Literature Exemplified by Annie Ernaux’s Happening
97 -
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Women’s Reproductive Rights in Unity Dow’s Novels: Questioning Legal Constraints
109 -
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“And the Law is There to Protect Everyone”? Gendered Rape Trials in Suzie Miller’s Prima Facie (2019)
125 -
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The Violence of Straightening the Law: How Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay Bill” and Legal Sexual Orientationism Heteronormatize the Legal and Cultural Order
143 - 3 Intersectionality and Intersecting Legal Regimes
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Mary Prince’s Slave Narrative and its Legal (After)Life: The Interplay of Gender, Law and Literature in The History of Mary Prince
165 -
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Poetic Objection in Sarah Kofman’s “Shoah (ou la Dis-Grâce)”
185 -
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Participation? Modest Clothes? (Non‐)Segregation? Jewish Responses to Gender Issues in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Century
201 -
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Fairly Traceable: Allegorical Depiction of Environmental Violence Against Indigenous People
221 - 4 Strategies of Empowerment and Emancipation
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(Un)Tying the Knot: Engagements, Legal Complications and Comic Ambiguity in Lessing’s Minna von Barnhelm
245 -
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Imagining Equality without Protection in the Era of the Equal Rights Amendment
269 -
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Silencing the Marginalized: A Study of Silence in Silence! The Court is in Session
291 -
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Futures of Feminist Law and Literature – An Afterword
307 -
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Notes on Contributors
329 -
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Index
335
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