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" Graphic justice : "
edited by Thomas Giddens
Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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641853
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Doc. No
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dltt
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Title & Author
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Graphic justice : : intersections of comics and law /\ edited by Thomas Giddens
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Page. NO
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xiii, 258 pages :: illustrations ;; 24 cm
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ISBN
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9781138787995
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: 113878799X
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9781315765754
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1315765756
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Notes
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"A GlassHouse book"
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Bibliographies/Indexes
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Includes bibliographical references and index
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Contents
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Lex comica: on comics and legal theory -- Holy blurring of core copyright principles, Batmobile! -- Devil's advocate: representation in heroic fiction, Daredevil and the law -- I am the law teacher!: an experiential approach using Judge Dredd to teach constitutional law -- Not foresighting, not answering: using graphic fiction to interrogate social and regulatory issues in biomedicine -- Law and the machine: fluid and mechanical selfhood in the Ghost in the shell -- When (super)heroes kill: vigilantism and deathworthiness in Justice League, Red team, and the Christopher Dorner killing spree -- Extreme restorative justice: the politics of vigilantism in Vertigo's 100 bullets -- Violent lives, ending violently?: justice, ideology and spectatorship in Watchmen -- Stepping off the page: "British Batman" as legal superhero -- The hero we need, not the one we deserve: vigilantism and the state of exception in Batman Incorporated -- Judge, jury and executioner: Judge Dredd, Jacques Derrida, drones -- Crimes against (super)humanity: graphic forms of justice and governance -- Graphic reporting: human rights violations through the lens of graphic novels
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Abstract
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"Establishing the medium of graphic fiction as a critical resource for interdisciplinary legal studies, this collection is the first to address the intersection of comics and law. Graphic fiction has gained enormous cultural capital and academic interest over recent years. Comics-inspired films fill our cinemas and superhero merchandise fills the shelves of supermarkets. In short, our culture is suffused with a comic book aesthetic: as, for example, the Occupy movement appropriates the mask of V, from the comic work V for Vendetta; and, tragically, as James Holmess murderous rampage through a Colorado movie theatre, seemingly sees him styling himself after Batmans arch nemesis, the Joker. From mass entertainment and consumerism to political activism and violence, we are surrounded by emanations of graphic storytelling. Meanwhile, the rise of academic disciplines such as comics studies demonstrates that the medium contains much more depth than the common assumption of its simplicity and juvenility might suggest. Against this background, comics offer an important resource for making sense of the contemporary place and role of law"--
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Subject
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Comic books, strips, etc.-- United States-- History and criticism
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Subject
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Graphic novels-- History and criticism
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Subject
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Law and literature
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Subject
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Justice in literature
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Dewey Classification
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741.5/973
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LC Classification
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PN6714.G739 2015
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Added Entry
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Giddens, Thomas
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Parallel Title
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Intersections of comics and law
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