ABSTRACT

This book engages with the place of law and legality within Australia’s distinctive contribution to global televisual culture.

Australian popular culture has created a lasting legacy – for good or bad – of representations of law, lawyers and justice ‘down under’. Within films and television of striking landscapes, peopled with heroes, antiheroes, survivors and jokers, there is a fixation on law, conflicts between legal orders, brutal violence and survival. Deeply compromised by the ongoing violence against the lives and laws of First Nation Australians, Australian film and television has sharply illuminated what it means to live with a ‘rule of law’ that rules with a legacy, and a reality, of deep injustice. This book is the first to bring together scholars to reflect on, and critically engage with, the representations and global implications of law, lawyers and justice captured through the lenses of Australian film, television and social media.

Exploring how distinctively Australian lenses capture uniquely Australian images and narratives, the book nevertheless engages these in order to provide broader insights into the contemporary translations and transmogrifications of law and justice.

part I|175 pages

The unsettled law and justice of Australia

chapter Chapter 5|24 pages

Vilification, vigilantism and violence

Troubling social media in Australia

chapter Chapter 6|23 pages

Picnic at Hanging Rock

Coming of age as a girl in the Gothic colonial institution

chapter Chapter 7|15 pages

Haunted colonialism

Space, place and colonialism in The Babadook

part II|111 pages

Australian gendered identities and law

chapter Chapter 9|23 pages

Rake and Rumpole – mavericks for justice

Purity and impurity in legal professionalism

chapter Chapter 10|18 pages

Cleaver Greene

The legal larrikin on Australian screens

chapter Chapter 11|20 pages

Eyes wide shut

Homosociality, justice and male rape through an Australian lens

chapter Chapter 12|18 pages

Romper Stomper

A critique of neoliberalism in Australia

chapter Chapter 13|17 pages

Justice at the end of Fury Road

chapter Chapter 14|13 pages

Going bunta on Western law

Violent jurisdictions, melodrama and the Australian carceral imaginary in Wentworth