ABSTRACT

This book opens up a range of important perspectives on law and violence by considering the ways in which their relationship is formulated in literature, television and film. Employing critical legal theory to address the relationship between crime fiction, law and justice, it considers a range of topics, including: the relationship between crime fiction, legal reasoning and critique; questions surrounding the relationship between law and justice; gender issues; the legal, political and social impacts of fictional representations of crime and justice; post-colonial perspectives on crime fiction; as well as the impact of law itself on the crime fiction’s development. Introducing a new sub-field of legal and literary research, this book will be of enormous interest to scholars in critical, cultural and socio-legal studies, as well as to others in criminology, as well as in literature.

chapter 1|14 pages

The introduction didn’t do it

ByMARIA ARISTODEMOU

chapter 2|12 pages

Critique, crime fi ction and the no right answer thesis

ByPATRICIA TUITT

chapter 6|16 pages

Attainable utopias

ByOSCAR GUARDIOLA-RIVERA

chapter 7|18 pages

Necessary deceptions: Kafka and the mystery of law

ByPETER FITZPATRICK

chapter 9|16 pages

Lawless

ByFIONA MACMILLAN, CHRIS BOGE