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Legal Artifices: Ten Essays on Roman Law in the Present Tense, Paperback / softback Book

Legal Artifices: Ten Essays on Roman Law in the Present Tense Paperback / softback

Edited by Thanos Zartaloudis

Part of the Encounters in Law & Philosophy series

Paperback / softback

Description

The first English-language anthology of Yan Thomas, whose contributions to Roman law revolutionised legal scholarshipCollects and translates 10 essays by Yan Thomas (1943 2008), the most renowned French jurist of the 20th centuryProvides a juridical perspective on the genealogy of the Western subject and the elementary conditions for the exercise of powerBuilds on the growing interest in Thomas' work generated by recent engagements, such as in Giorgio Agamben's Homo Sacer seriesDemonstrates the formal continuity of socio-legal techniques that have defined Western legal cultureWestern legal professionals habitually rely on a version of legal history that bolsters their own sway over the present.

The legal mythologies undergirding these self-serving proposals are divided between doctrines of law's immemorial nature, and of its sacred (Roman) origins.

Thomas's de-mythicised jurisprudence, presented in this collection of essays, dismisses these sagas.

His work sent seismic waves across the humanities and social sciences, with claims including: Law is not a set of rules, but the operation of legal arguments; lawyers are the agents of the legal denaturalisation of the worldRome is misread as an essentially political entity; the effect exercised on Roman society by its jurists ranks before that of its politiciansDespite a widely accepted opposition between modern labour law and the Roman renting-out of a slave's workforce, there exist unexpected commonalities'Legal order' and 'responsibility' are among the inventions of modern law; they are not part of the timeless inventory of the world

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