Sensing the nation's law : historical inquiries into the aesthetics of democratic legitimacy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Sensing the nation's law : historical inquiries into the aesthetics of democratic legitimacy
(Studies in the history of law and justice, v. 13)
Springer, [2018]
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Note
Co-editors: Angela Condello, Sarah Marusek, Mark Antaki
Includes bibliographical references
Contents of Works
- Chapter 1. Introduction
- Part I: Revolution, Constitution, Republic
- Chapter 2. Monument, Portrait, Tableau: Making Sense of and With Jacques Louis David's Tennis Court Oath
- Chapter 3. The Quest for the Decisive Constitutional Moment (DCM)
- Chapter 4. Courbet and the Nude Republican Master
- Part II: The Aesthetic Constitution of Office
- Chapter 5. Justice Petrified: The Seat of the Italian Supreme Court between Law, Architecture and Iconography
- Chapter 6. Visual Rhetoric as "a Space-in-between": Semiotic Account of French Official Presidential Photographs
- Part III: Untimely Reflections on the Nation's Law
- Chapter 7. A Hypothesis on the Genealogy of the Motto "In God We Trust" and the Emergence of the Identity of the Church.-Chapter 8. Here and Now: From "Aestheticizing Politics" to "Politicizing Art"
- Part IV: Out of Many, One
- Chapter 9. Appreciation or Appropriation? An Indigenous Moment in the American Numismatic Narrative (1999-2009). Chapter 10. Internormative Gastronomies: Law, Nation and Identity
- Part V: Consensus
- Chapter 11. Aesthetic Mediation: Towards Legitimate Power
