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Bodies of Law
 
 
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Bodies of Law [Paperback]

Alan Hyde (Author)

Price: $37.50 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

July 7, 1997 0691012288 978-0691012285

The most basic assertions about our bodies--that they are ours and distinguish us from each other, that they are private and have boundaries, races, and genders--are all political theories, constructed in legal texts for political purposes. So argues Alan Hyde in this first account of the body in legal thought. Hyde demonstrates that none of the constructions of the body in legal texts are universal truths that rest solely on body experience. Drawing on an array of fascinating case material, he shows that legal texts can construct all kinds of bodies, including those that are not owned at all, that are just like other bodies, that are public, open, and accessible to others. Further, the language, images, and metaphors of the body in legal texts can often convince us of positions to which we would not assent as a matter of political theory.

Through analysis of legal texts, Hyde shows, for example, how law's words construct the vagina as the most searchable body part; the penis as entirely under mental control; the bone marrow that need not be shared with a half-sibling who will die without it; and urine that must be surrendered for drug testing in rituals of national purification. This book will interest anyone concerned with cultural studies, gender studies, ethnic studies, and political theory, or anyone who has heard the phrase "body constructed in discourse" and wants to see, step by step, exactly how this is done.


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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Where books by critical legal-studies practitioners such as Bell, Williams, and Delgado have circulated, Hyde's study of the ways U.S. jurisprudence "constructs" the human body will find readers. Hyde's approach is stylistically less adventurous than Bell's and Delgado's "Crenshaw" interlocutors; he experimented (an introduction reveals) with Williams' autobiographical technique but found it inappropriate to his focus on "the way American lawyers talk about the body: the range of metaphors, similes, and other verbal constructions that cumulatively form a discourse of the body." Hyde teases out buried assumptions revealed by legal texts that define the body as machine or property, grant (or deny) it privacy rights, position reproductive capacity in terms of the market, permit or proscribe display of the body or specific body parts, and view the body as individual or participant in community, as site of differences (e.g., race and gender) or symbol of a common condition. A bit academic but full of provocative insights. Mary Carroll --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

Full of provocative insights. . . . -- Booklist

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
QUIET LITERALLY the first legal analogy taught to many American law students imagines the body as a machine, owned by its owner or buyer (someone or something other than the "body"), and used by that owner in order to make money. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sentimentalized body, body fantasia, sentimental body, competing discursive constructions, sentimental bodies, inviolable body, commodified body, appearance regulation, body autonomy, penile plethysmograph, discursive creation, discursive bodies, discursive body, machine metaphor, privacy interest, body cavity searches, ethical aspirations, law constructs, machine body, privacy expectations, legal body
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Supreme Court, United States, George Hawkins, Jeanine Biocic, Shirley Rodriques, First Amendment, John Moore, Judith Butler, Sondra Tamimi, Treasury Employees, Elaine Scarry, Henning Jacobson, Margaret Green, Richard Rodriguez, Howard Johnson, Renee Rogers, Rudolph Lee, Mary Anne, Peter Brooks, Walter Harper, Justice Kennedy, Civil Rights Act, Johnson Controls, Mary Craig
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