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E-raamat: Legal Theory and the Media of Law

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As many disciplines in the humanities have experienced a focus on cultures impact in recent decades, questions surrounding the significance of media such as writing, print, and computer networks have become increasingly relevant. This book seeks to demonstrate that a media and cultural theory perspective can also be highly productive for legal theory.

Thomas Vesting approaches law as an artificial and constructive element within culture and emphasizes the many possibilities that varied forms of media have opened to law, from oral history through to scripture, print and modern day digital networks. While providing historical examples for these theoretical assumptions, the connections between media and law are reconstructed in a practical way and with an eye toward the future. The book closes with an analysis of our present age as a network culture and discusses how this metaphorical framework can be of use in thinking about issues such as constitutionalism, human rights, the state, democracy and education.

Legal Theory and the Media of Law will be of great interest to legal, cultural and media theorists as well as academics of politics, sociology and philosophy.

Arvustused

'What significance does media (e.g. the form and materiality of expression) have for law and legal thought? Covering a hugely impressive historical range - from oral traditions, through the invention of writing and print, to today's computer networks - this new book from Thomas Vesting offers the best guide currently available to that question. Putting in dialogue media theory and legal theory, Vesting does not shy away from the most difficult issues at the intersection of these two fields. The book will be of interest to everyone from book historians to theorists of contemporary mass media. An impressive achievement.' --Maksymilian Del Mar, Queen Mary University of London, UK

Preface and acknowledgements x
PART I LANGUAGE AND SPEECH
1 Introduction: Legal theory as media theory
3(26)
The dependence of (media) theory on media
3(2)
The culture and epistemology of networks
5(10)
Further consequences for legal theory
15(14)
2 Language, media, subjectivity
29(23)
Language as such
29(8)
Language theory and media theory
37(8)
Language of man?
45(7)
3 On the orality of oral cultures
52(28)
Knowledge - Certain conceptual clarifications
52(5)
Fostering the continuity of tradition
57(14)
Integration of the individual into oral tradition
71(9)
4 Oral legal culture and the "ethics" of the gift
80(24)
Law-making and the oral way of life
80(10)
Referential contexts
90(7)
Confidence and trust as necessary infrastructure
97(7)
5 Traces of oral legal culture in Homer (and Hesiod)
104(29)
Could Homer write?
104(8)
Themis, dike, nomos
112(7)
The poetic form of law
119(14)
PART II WRITING
6 Hot writing and cool
133(30)
Theory of writing
133(8)
Evolution of writing
141(7)
Uses of writing
148(15)
7 Tradition and innovation in writing cultures
163(28)
Writing and writing culture
163(10)
Greek alphabetic writing and epistemic knowledge
173(9)
Evolution of the inner human being
182(9)
8 Transitions to writing in law
191(34)
The "incarnation" of law in kingdoms of the Ancient Near East
191(11)
Athens and the "excarnation" of law
202(9)
By way of further comparison: Early Roman law
211(14)
9 Specialist writing: Roman civil law
225(25)
Legal culture of the Roman Republic
225(7)
Further characteristics of epistemic formalism
232(8)
The other side of epistemic formalism
240(10)
10 The comprehensive text of Jewish law
250(25)
The Torah as a foundational text
250(8)
Flexibilization of writing
258(6)
The law and the community of interpretation
264(11)
PART III PRINT
11 The parchment codex and the "spirit" of Christianity
275(28)
A new cultural rupture
275(12)
"Horizontal" and "vertical" hermeneutics
287(9)
The "outerworldly" individual
296(7)
12 Print culture, print epistemology
303(25)
The printed book
303(9)
An epistemological turning point
312(9)
Subjectivity/individuality
321(7)
13 "Incarnation" of sovereignty
328(24)
Absolute monarchy
328(10)
Media of the King
338(7)
The Ancien Regime of identity
345(7)
14 "Excarnation" of sovereignty
352(28)
Preliminary considerations
352(9)
The printed constitution
361(8)
Making the constitution
369(11)
15 The cultural framework of the liberal state
380(31)
Individualism
380(9)
Individualization of law
389(8)
Modern democracy
397(14)
PART IV COMPUTER NETWORKS
16 Mass media and mass culture
411(30)
The rise of mass culture
411(9)
A "flat" world of relations
420(10)
The polyphonic soundbox
430(11)
17 The culture and epistemology of networks
441(28)
The computer as medium
441(9)
A new order of knowledge
450(9)
The interlinked "relational" subject
459(10)
18 Constitutionalism
469(30)
Changing media, changing constitutions
469(9)
Sub-constitutions
478(8)
Beyond the printed constitution
486(13)
19 Statehood and democracy
499(29)
Print culture and the liberal state
499(10)
Mass culture and the welfare state
509(8)
Network culture and the network state
517(11)
20 Further exemplary fields
528(31)
Marriage and family
528(9)
Schools and universities
537(10)
Communication and media
547(12)
Bibliography 559(56)
Index 615
Thomas Vesting, Professor for Public Law, Legal Theory and Media Theory, Faculty of Law, Goethe University, Germany