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8 Law, Culture & Human. 5 (2012)

handle is hein.journals/lculh8 and id is 1 raw text is: 








                                                             Law, Culture and the Humanities
                                                                               8(1) 5
Editorial                                                           @rThe Author(s) 2012
                                                            Reprints and permission: sagepub.
                                                               co.ulk/journalsPermissions.nav
                                                            DOI: 10.1177/1743872111426054
                                                                        Ich.sagepub.com
                                                                          OSAGE


How   does our cultural and national location influence our understandings of legal
phenomena?   This question seems to admit of an obvious answer, namely that our under-
standings are decisively shaped by those locations as well as the particular time period in
which  we work. Yet increasingly, or so it seems, culture and nation are less decisive.
Globalization has not just transformed the objects of our inquiries but also the ways in
which we  constitute those objects. Borrowings of theorizations from various places are
now  quite common  in our interdisciplinary field.
   In this issue of LCH, we present a symposium  on the work of an important Italian
philosopher, Roberto Esposito. As the University of Minnesota advertisement for his
book Bios states, Roberto Esposito is one of the most prolific and important exponents
of contemporary  Italian political theory. Bios-his first book to be translated into
English-builds  on two decades of highly regarded thought, including his thesis that the
modem   individual-with all of its civil and political rights as well as its moral powers-
is an attempt to attain immunity from the contagion of the extraindividual, namely, the
community.   (see http://www.upress.umn.edu/Books/E/esposito   bios.html) Such   a
thesis places Esposito's work at the heart of contemporary inquiries in law, culture, and
humanities.
   I am grateful to Timothy Campbell and Adam Sitze for assembling such an interesting
and important set of reflections on Esposito's thought.

                                                                      Austin Sarat
                                                                   Amherst College

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