ABSTRACT

Synesthesia is the phenomenon where sensual perceptions are joined together as a combined experience – that is, the ability to feel color, hear the visual, or even smell emotion. These types of unions expand the normativity of our legal thinking, as the abilities to represent the tethering of emotion, place, and concept to law are magnified. In this way, interpretations of law and legal phenomena that are enriched with embodied meaning contribute to our understanding of how law works – namely through sensory input, sensory output, and the attachment that happens within these sensory unions. This edited volume explores the richly complex manifestations of synesthesia and law drawing from a plurality of approaches, including legal studies, philosophy, social science, linguistics, history, cultural studies, and the humanities. Contributions in the volume discuss how we feel/taste/smell/see/hear law within the synesthetic scope of legal interpretation, legal consciousness, and legal culture. The collection examines aspects of embodiment, place, and presence that constitutively frame law amidst social, cultural, and historical contexts.

chapter 1|8 pages

Exploring layers of law and the sensory at the volcano

BySARAH MARUSEK

chapter 4|19 pages

What law tastes like: A free conjecture on the palate of juridicity (Menu dégustation en quatre services)

ByMARCÍLIO FRANCA AND MARIA FRANCISCA CARNEIRO

chapter 9|17 pages

Artistic flash: Sketching the courtroom trial

ByANITA LAM

chapter 10|16 pages

Dependency and care in Peirce’s training of reasoning

ByCELIA BARDWELL-JONES

chapter 12|14 pages

The copyright of my sensorimotor experience

ByKRISTIAN BANKOV