Loving Justice
Legal Emotions in William Blackstone's England
dc.contributor.author | Temple, Kathryn D. | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2024-04-03T10:12:34Z | |
dc.date.available | 2024-04-03T10:12:34Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2019 | |
dc.identifier | ONIX_20240403_9781479832637_201 | |
dc.identifier.uri | https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/89483 | |
dc.description.abstract | A history of legal emotions in William Blackstone’s England and their relationship to justice William Blackstone’s masterpiece, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765–1769), famously took the “ungodly jumble” of English law and transformed it into an elegant and easily transportable four-volume summary. Soon after publication, the work became an international monument not only to English law, but to universal English concepts of justice and what Blackstone called “the immutable laws of good and evil.” Most legal historians regard the Commentaries as a brilliant application of Enlightenment reasoning to English legal history. Loving Justice contends that Blackstone’s work extends beyond making sense of English law to invoke emotions such as desire, disgust, sadness, embarrassment, terror, tenderness, and happiness. By enlisting an affective aesthetics to represent English law as just, Blackstone created an evocative poetics of justice whose influence persists across the Western world. In doing so, he encouraged readers to feel as much as reason their way to justice. Ultimately, Temple argues that the Commentaries offers a complex map of our affective relationship to juridical culture, one that illuminates both individual and communal understandings of our search for justice, and is crucial for understanding both justice and injustice today. | |
dc.language | English | |
dc.subject.classification | thema EDItEUR::L Law::LA Jurisprudence and general issues | |
dc.subject.classification | thema EDItEUR::L Law::LA Jurisprudence and general issues::LAT Legal profession / practice of law: general::LATC Legal ethics and professional conduct | |
dc.subject.other | aesthetics | |
dc.subject.other | affective aesthetics | |
dc.subject.other | bodies | |
dc.subject.other | close reading | |
dc.subject.other | Commentaries on the Laws of England | |
dc.subject.other | commodification | |
dc.subject.other | cruel optimism | |
dc.subject.other | curatorial reading | |
dc.subject.other | electric shock | |
dc.subject.other | empathy | |
dc.subject.other | empire | |
dc.subject.other | English legal history | |
dc.subject.other | excessive subjectivity | |
dc.subject.other | gothic | |
dc.subject.other | gradualism | |
dc.subject.other | graveyard poets | |
dc.subject.other | Guantanamo Bay | |
dc.subject.other | harmonic justice | |
dc.subject.other | Harper Lee | |
dc.subject.other | history of emotions | |
dc.subject.other | jury trial | |
dc.subject.other | Law and Humanities | |
dc.subject.other | marriage law | |
dc.subject.other | Nathaniel Hawes | |
dc.subject.other | Onslow v. Horne | |
dc.subject.other | orientalism | |
dc.subject.other | peine forte et dure | |
dc.subject.other | poetics | |
dc.subject.other | poetry | |
dc.subject.other | productive melancholia | |
dc.subject.other | real property | |
dc.subject.other | sympathy | |
dc.subject.other | Terry Lee Morris | |
dc.subject.other | Westminster Hall | |
dc.subject.other | Wollstonecraft | |
dc.title | Loving Justice | |
dc.title.alternative | Legal Emotions in William Blackstone's England | |
dc.type | book | |
oapen.identifier.doi | 10.18574/nyu/9781479832637.001.0001 | |
oapen.relation.isPublishedBy | 7d95336a-0494-42b2-ad9c-8456b2e29ddc | |
oapen.relation.isbn | 9781479832637 | |
oapen.relation.isbn | 9781479895274 | |
oapen.imprint | NYU Press | |
oapen.place.publication | New York |