ABSTRACT

Reading Modern Law identifies and elaborates upon key critical methodologies for reading and writing about law in modernity. The force of law rests on determinate and localizable authorizations, as well as an expansive capacity to encompass what has not been pre-figured by an order of rules. The key question this dynamic of law raises is how legal forms might be deployed to confront and disrupt injustice. The urgency of this question must not eclipse the care its complexity demands. This book offers a critical methodology for addressing the many challenges thrown up by that question, whilst testifying to its complexity. The essays in this volume - engagements direct or oblique, with the work of Peter Fitzpatrick - chart a mode of resisting the proliferation of social scientific methods, as much as geo-political empire. The authors elaborate a critical and interdisciplinary treatment of law and modernity, and outline the pivotal role of sovereignty in contemporary formations of power, both national and international. From various overlapping vantage points, therefore, Reading Modern Law interrogates law's relationship to power, as well as its relationship to the critical work of reading and writing about law in modernity.

chapter |9 pages

Incitement to Justice

Fitzpatrick's Citations as Counter-Imperialism

chapter |10 pages

Reading Thomas Hobbes

Peter Fitzpatrick's Gentle Deconstructionist Style

chapter |16 pages

Reading Luther

Law, Modernity, and Psychoanalysis

chapter |19 pages

Totemic Immimanence

Peter Fitzpatrick's Liminal Contemplation of Law

chapter |13 pages

‘the Obliging Etymology of “nomos” '

Peter Fitzpatrick and the Aesthetics of Law

chapter |15 pages

Writing by Firelight

Constructing an Enduring Consciousness of Post-Coloniality

chapter |18 pages

Reading Slowly

The Law of Literature and the Literature of Law