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15 Law & Human. 1 (2021)

handle is hein.journals/lawhuman15 and id is 1 raw text is: LAW AND HUMANITIES                                     Routledne
2021, VOL. 15, NO. 1, 1-3
https://doi.org/10.1080/17521483.2021.1918378          Taylor&Francis Group
Editorial
It is always a pleasure when writing these editorials to reflect on the contents of
an issue and to marvel at the wide cast of the law and humanities net in terms
both of geography and of scholarly subject matter. Few legal journals can
claim, we think, to have such a broad diversity of contributions as this one. It is
a claim amply borne out by the present issue. In addition to Marie-Catherine
Petersmann's review of Frederic Neyrat's, The Unconstructable Earth: An Ecology
of Separation (2018), this issue contains five full-length articles. What follows is
a brief overview, which, in accordance with time-honoured theatrical tradition,
introduces the articles in order of appearance. In fact, the phrase 'running
order' is apt to describe the sequence of the five articles that make up the bulk
of this issue. 'Order', because the one thing that certainly connects them to
each other is concern for 'law' broadly conceived. 'Running', because the
course of the articles takes us from two that are concerned with law and literature
- the first law as literature, the second law through a literary lens - to a piece
engaged with the photographic lens, to another on the cinematic moving
image, to another on law and dance. The running order therefore runs through
forms of order ranging from inscribed code to the static image to the moving
image and finally to bodily kinesthetics. Stability is an attribute traditionally
associated with government, but talk of 'running' a country is a clue to other attri-
butes at play - attributes of motion, emotion, and change. 'Change and the Law'
is in fact the theme of the annual Law and Humanities Roundtable for Summer
2021. We are pleased to say that the final article in the present issue - Sean Mul-
cahy's 'Dances with Laws' - was first presented at last year's Law and Humanities
Roundtable. In this issue, as in all issues of this journal, our contributors show us
that concerns for law's wider cultural impact and cultural expression run deep in
the long running history of law and society. The course of the present issue is
wide-ranging not only in terms of the sorts of cultural works that are engaged
with, but also wide-ranging through time and space. We visit the Anglo-Saxon
kingdom of England; India in the shadow of the Bhopal disaster; Poland in the
shadow of Nazi war crimes; and, bringing us right up to date, we visit Hong
Kong's Storm series of films, and popular UK television show Strictly Come
Dancing.
We begin with Anya Adair, an Assistant Professor in Law and Humanities at the
University of Hong Kong, who teaches courses in the Faculty of Law as well as in
the School of English. Her article 'Narratives of authority: the earliest Old English
law-code prefaces', examines the introductions to the earliest surviving English

© 2021 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

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