Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Outlaws and Spies: Legal Exclusion in Law and Literature [Kõva köide]

Edited and translated by ,
Examines the role of literature in representing and critiquing the exclusion from law as an enduring tactic of state power

Outlaws are often viewed as historical figures of popular resistance, but there is another side to legal exclusion. In offering readings from two bodies of literature not normally read together -- the literature of outlawry and the literature of espionage -- this book shows that a substantial body of writing within these genres serves an important purpose in representing and critiquing the longstanding use of legal exclusion as a means of supporting state power.




Acknowledgements vi
Introduction 1(20)
1 Outside the Law in the Middle Ages
21(34)
2 Sovereign Outlaws: Shakespeare's Second Tetralogy
55(25)
3 The Endurance of Exclusion: Versions of Ned Kelly
80(27)
4 `We're Not Policemen': Espionage and Law in John le Carre
107(27)
5 `All Plots Tend to Move Deathward': Plots and Consequences in Don DeLillo
134(25)
6 Unanswered Questions: Ciaran Carson
159(23)
7 Contesting the Virtual: William Gibson
182(19)
Conclusion 201(8)
Bibliography 209(24)
Index 233