ABSTRACT

Law in the Courts of Love traces the literary history and diversity of past legal systems. These 'minor jurisprudences' range from the spiritual laws of the courts of conscience to the code and judgements of love handed down by women's courts in medieval France. Professor Goodrich presents the 15th Century Courts of Love in Paris as one instance of an alternative jurisdiction drawn from the diversities of the legal and literary past. Their textual records are correspondingly mixed in genre, being in the form of poems, narratives, plays, treaties and judicial decisions. More broadly, these studies trace certain boundaries of modern law and make up one of many forms of legal knowledge which escape today's vision of a unitary law. The author believes that the unquesionable faith in a unity law and its distance from person and emotion is precisely what makes impossible the attention to the individual that justice ultimately requires. Law in the Courts of Love shows how the historical diversity of forms and procedures of law can competently form the basis for critical revisions of contemporary legal doctrine and professional practice. This book will be of interest to undergraduate and postgraduate students of law and literature, critical legal studies and legal history, or anyone wishing to specialise in feminist legal theory.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Towards a minor jurisprudence

chapter |20 pages

Salem and Bizance

A short history of the two laws

chapter |43 pages

Law in the Courts of Love

Andreas Capellanus and the Judgments of love

chapter |23 pages

Eating law

Commons, common land, common law

chapter |17 pages

Specula laws

Image, aesthetic and common law

chapter |26 pages

Of law and forgetting

Literature, ethics and legal judgment

chapter |22 pages

Transmission and law

Or, a sorrow beyond words

chapter |25 pages

Fate as seduction

The other scene of legal judgment

chapter |35 pages

Sleeping with the enemy

On the politics of critical legal studies in America