Manzoni: Dr. "Azzeccagarbugli"

Manzoni: Dr. "Azzeccagarbugli"
Picture by Francesco Gonin, 1840 edition of Alessandro Manzoni's "I promessi sposi"

domenica 26 aprile 2009

Prof. Emanuele Conte's Lectures

Dear all,
next week Prof. Conte will talk about the interactions between Law and History. There will be only two talks, as Friday is the 1st of May. He suggested the following reading, that I will send you as soon as possible.

James Q. Whitman, "Bring back the Glory!", in "Rechtsgeschichte", 4 (2004), pp. 74-81.
Mathias Reimann, "Nineteenth German Legal Science", in "Boston College Law Review", 31.4 (1990), pp. 842-897, especially par. II and III.

http://www.giur.uniroma3.it/themes/GiurBlue/docenti/conte/conte.htm

venerdì 24 aprile 2009

Law and paintings and drawings and sculptures...


These are some of the pictures that you proposed becuase they all are, in a particular way, linked to the idea of law and/or justice. You will find among them:







- "La vision de Hugo" by Théophile-Alexandre Steinlein.
- "Portrait of the lawyer Hugo Simons" by Otto Dix.
- Buon Governo frescoes by Ambrogio Lorenzetti.
- "Les gens de justice" by Honoré Daumier.
- "Mercurio in volo" by Alessandro Romano.
- "Die Gerechtigkeit (The Justice), Tarot by Hans Rudolf Giger.
- "La consegna del Codice Rocco" (The delivery of the Rocco Code) by Giulio Bargellini (Ministry of Justice, Rome).
- "Electric Chair" by Andy Warhol.
- "Abu Ghraib 66" by Fernando Botero.
- "Gerechtigkeitsbrunnen" (Fountain of Justice), Berne, by Hans Gieng
- Lady Justice, Old Bailey, London


























mercoledì 22 aprile 2009

Exam Calendar

Dear all,
as you know, we will tell you all the details about the way we are going to examine you at the end of the course. Anyway, it is sure that if you don't write your comments on the blog you will be obliged to write a little essay in English. The exam calendar is the following:

JUNE & JULY:

9th June, h. 9:00

23th June, h. 9:00

21st July, h. 9:00

SEPTEMBER:

8th September, h. 9:00

22nd September, h. 9:00

Law and Architecture in London



Hi everybody!

First of all, it would be really great even if a little group of students could go to the Teatro India to see Civica's version of the MOV (as Emanuela suggested) which seems to be absolutely original. You now know the play quite well, I'm sure you will enjoy it!

Second, if you happen to go to London, especially after these talks about Law and Architecture, try to visit the Inns of Court too. Maybe you are not all aware that you can visit them. I suggest Lincoln's Inn (with lovely law bookshop) and, of course, Inner and Middle Temple (with the famous Temple Church...). They are all in the very centre of London, not far away from Trafalgar Square and near the High Courts of Justice too. I'm sure that the architecture will give you an idea of the barristers' status in England! By the way, if you have really patient friends/family, you can also see a criminal case in the Old Bailey (http://www.touruk.co.uk/london_sights/oldbailey1.htm). It's quite fun.

lunedì 20 aprile 2009

Thanks and something else

Dear all,

first of all I would like to thank you for your participation to the lectures and your comments on the blog: most of them are really interesting and I'm sorry that I'm not able to answer to all of them properly (today we reached the incredible number of 250 comments and there are still 6 speakers left!). Anyway, I would like to assure you that we are going to talk a little bit about them during your exam. I will try to look through your comments before the exam in order to discuss some issues with you later. Thank you also for the comments about the MOV movie that we couldn't watch together! Next time it will (has to) work, don't worry.

About Emanuela Hernandez's question, as you know, Prof. Watt was so kind to answer: I'm sure you will really enjoy his talks and I'm very sorry that I won't be there! The point is, I think, to analyse the symbolic dimension of architecture in its connection to law. I think that you can understand a little bit what it is all about reading David Evans' article I sent you. He writes about the Inns of Court in London. We don't have anything like that, but what about the architecture of tribunals in Italy? Do you know them? And the law faculties? Some of them are very ordinary buildings, some others certainly not. Why? Of course this is only one possibility.

Finally, I would like to tell you 2 things:

1) If you discuss some interesting topics about law and architecture during this week you can send me the images you proposed with a little comment: I will try to put on the blog some of them.
2) If someone wants my power point presentations just write me an email and I will send them to you.

It was really great to meet you finally!
Best

domenica 19 aprile 2009

Quotation



Can you find the original English version of this quotation of Hannah Arendt's "Eichmann in Jerusalem"?

"Un processo assomiglia a un dramma in quanto che dal principio alla fine si occupa del protagonista, non della vittima".
(H. Arendt, "La banalità del male. Eichmann a Gerusalemme", trad. P. Bernardini, Milano: Universale Economica Feltrinelli, 2008 (1964), p. 17).

venerdì 17 aprile 2009

Prof. Gary Watt's Lectures

Seminar One:
Wednesday 22nd April, 13:45 - 15:45, Hall 3
“Foundations: architectural metaphors of law and society”


“A lawyer without history or literature is a mechanic, a mere working mason; if he possesses some knowledge of these, he may venture to call himself an architect”.
Sir Walter Scott, Guy Mannering (1815)

“In that jurisdiction precedes law, in that it marks the point of entry into the juridical sphere and speech, it has to be visible in advance of utterance and hence must be a property of communal space, of the architecture of the institution, of context and vestment that can be apprehended prior to any discursive intervention in the name of legality.”
Peter Goodrich, “Visive Powers: Colours, Trees and Genres of Jurisdiction” (2008) 2(2) Law and Humanities 213–231, 214.

Preparation:
Identify an architectural metaphor employed in the legal language of Italy or elsewhere – and come prepared to discuss it. For a general introduction to the dominance of metaphors in US legal language, read Bernard J. Hibbitts, “Making Sense of Metaphors: Visuality, Aurality, and the Reconfiguration of American Legal Discourse”, 16 Cardozo L. Rev. 229 (1994) (accessible at http://faculty.law.pitt.edu/hibbitts/meta_con.htm)

Seminar Outline:
We will consider the significance to legal language of the architectural metaphors, including the metaphors of “the rule” and “the level ground”. We will also critically examine the following two quotes which use architectural metaphors to explain “equity”:

“The formall cause of Equity is the matching and levelling of facts falling out, and the circumstances thereof, with the rules of the Law, as buildings are framed to carpenters lines and squares...Not unfitly is Equity termed the rule of manners: for as by a rule the faults of a building are so discovered, so doth equity judge aright, both of the written law, and also of all mens actions and behaviours: and therefore such as are ministers of Justice, apply and frame their judgments, after the square and rule of good and legal, that is to say, of God’s Law, and the Lawes of Nature”
William West, Symboleography (1593)

“When the law speaks universally, then, and a case arises on it which is not covered by the universal statement, then it is right, where the legislator fails us and has erred by oversimplicity, to correct the omission-to say what the legislator himself would have said had he been present, and would have put into his law if he had known. Hence the equitable is just, and better than one kind of justice-not better than absolute justice but better than the error that arises from the absoluteness of the statement. And this is the nature of the equitable, a correction of law where it is defective owing to its universality. In fact this is the reason why all things are not determined by law, that about some things it is impossible to lay down a law, so that a decree is needed. For when the thing is indefinite the rule also is indefinite, like the leaden rule used in making the Lesbian moulding; the rule adapts itself to the shape of the stone and is not rigid, and so too the decree is adapted to the facts.”
Aristotle, The Nichomachean Ethics, Book V chapter 10



Seminar Two
Thursday 23rd April 10:00 - 11:45, Hall 4
“Honoré Daumier - law, architecture and the art of chiaroscuro”

“a painter so mighty, that no terms can exaggerate the greatness of his importance”.
- Julius Meier-Graefe (Florence Simmonds, trans.)



Preparation:
Bring a picture (by any artist) demonstrating chiaroscuro and be prepared to discuss its symbolic significance to the law AND/OR bring a picture of a contemporary or historical architectural site connected to the law and be prepared to discuss it (you will be supplied with extracts from D Evans, “The Architecture of the Inns of Court” (1999) 10(1) Law and Critique 1-25 and K F Taylor, In the Theater of Criminal Justice: The Palais de Justice in Second Empire Paris (Princeton University Press, 1993)).

Read the extract from the editorial to (2008) 3(1) Law and Humanities (set out below).

Seminar Outline:
We will discuss the legal significance of the architectural/chiaroscuro images you have found, and some others that I will bring to the seminar. Are you familiar with the phrases “black letter law” and “bright line rule”? Is anything in nature black and white? Is the law? Be prepared to produce your own chiaroscuro study of the law – materials will be supplied!

Gary Watt on law, architecture and the art of chiaroscuro in the work of Honoré Daumier, from the Editorial to 3(1) Law and Humanities (2008):

“Daumier’s work exhibits a complete mastery of composition, line, tone and – when used, which was relatively seldom – colour. A distinctive feature of much of his work is the bold use of chiaroscuro (or clair-obscur), which is the use of dark shadow and bright light to produce dramatic tonal contrast. This feature is the foundation for many of his greatest oil paintings - including Le Lutteur (1852-53); Les Deux Avocats (1855-7); L’Homme à la corde (1858-60); La Laveuse (1860-1) and Crispin et Scapin (1863-5) – and, of course, it is an almost universal feature of his caricatures, which were for the most part executed exclusively in black-and-white monochrome – or as we might term it nowadays, “greyscale”. One can attribute Daumier’s fascination with lawyers to many sources – including the fact that he was employed (at the age of twelve or thirteen) to act as a runner for a notary or bailiff in Paris and the fact that, around the same time, his father is said to have been a frequent visitor to the courts on account of his troubled business affairs – but whatever captured his artistic imagination, it was surely the singular contrast between lawyers’ white collars and black robes that captivated his artistic eye. In the introduction to the English language publication of Les Gens de Justice, Julien Cain notes that “Daumier saw this ‘magic lantern of black figures’ performed before his very eyes” (Les Gens de Justice (New York: Tudor Publishing, 1959) page 13). As for the deeply sardonic critique of lawyers that emerges through his work, that may be attributable to his republican – essentially revolutionary – political outlook, and to the fact that he was imprisoned in his early twenties for his caricature Gargantua (1831). This caricature depicts the last king to rule in France - Louis-Philippe I, so-called “King of the French” – seated on a commode throne continually “issuing” favours whilst being continually fed by the bourgeoisie....
Daumier deserves his place in the pantheon of Law and Humanities, because he exemplifies the central aim of the whole project – which is to cast external scholarly or artistic illumination upon law and lawyers. But do Daumier’s caricatures cast too bright a light? Is his clair too brilliant, with the result that his obscur is too dark, too cynical? We do not think so. If there is an extremism to Daumier’s caricatures, it is attributable to a great extent to the somewhat journalist context in which those works appeared. There was also the need to ensure that the work was attractive to the editors and to the paying public. Surprising as it may seem to us, Daumier sometimes struggled to have certain pieces accepted – even, and perhaps especially, towards the end of his career. Despite this, the passionate humanity of the man is clear from his caricatures – his depiction of the lawyer leaving court with a tearful widow and her “orphan” child achieves pity and avoids sentimentality. The picture is so well drawn, the legend accompanying it in Les Gens de Justice is otiose: “Vous avez perdu votre procès c'est vrai ..... mais vous avez du éprouver bien du plaisir à m’entendre plaider”. This caricature appears as plate number 35 in Les Gens de Justice (see Stone number 1371: www.daumier.org), and to conclude we will briefly consider the plate that immediately follows it. Plate 36 (Stone number 1372: www.daumier.org) depicts the grand staircase leading up to the Palais de Justice, which still stands at the heart of Paris on the Île de la Cité. Walking down the staircase are two lawyers, a few steps apart, each nursing a bundle of documents under his left arm. Each lawyer is looking straight ahead in full-frontal profile; faces devoid of passion, almost without expression – most un-Daumier-like. Their black robes drop straight, their white official scarves – an elongated version of what English barristers call “tabs” - hang from their collars rigidly perpendicular, as if starched. The plate carries the legend “Grand escalier du Palais de justice. Vue de faces” [fig 1 below]. The humour is as understated as was the pathos of the previous plate. The reference is architectural: here, in the language of architects, is a “front profile of the grand staircase”, and here – in the shape of lawyers – are two cold and rigid men of stone. The fact that the plate is itself a lithograph– and was therefore set in stone – adds a further dimension to the metaphor...Plate 36 was apparently based on an earlier wood engraving (1836), which is a pleasing metaphor for the way in which the law begins in nature before it is set in stone, but the evolution of the work does not end there. Daumier revisited the image around 1865 in the form of a mixed media work (charcoal, soft pencil, ink, watercolour and gouache on paper). The new version is entitled Le Grand escalier du Palais de justice [fig 2 below]. The pronoun “le” has been added, and the concluding clause “Vue de faces” has been removed. Accordingly, there is, on this occasion, no attempt to repeat the architectural joke. The composition of the picture broadly corresponds to the earlier lithograph, but there are significant differences. There is only one lawyer walking down the stairs, but that is not especially significant. What is significant is the fact that the lawyer is clearly moving – his hat is soft and sitting somewhat askew, his robes are flowing, his white scarf is ruffled and shifting and his feet can be seen stepping down the stairs, whereas before we did not see them. And there, on his chest, near his heart, is the smallest square of red – the ribbon of la Légion d’honneur. Apart from this small patch of red, the picture is grey or thinly washed in pale pink and yellow. There is hope in this image. The stone cold lawyer has moved. The colourless lawyer has a spark of passion in his heart. His face is still aloof but he is moving, and he is walking down from his lofty place, and he might just be walking towards humanity”.


Seminar Three
Thursday 23rd April 10:00 - 11:45, Hall 4
“On Cathedrals and the Theban Wall”


Dictus et Amphion, Thebanae conditor arcis,
Saxa movere sono testudinis, et prece blanda
Ducere quo vellet. Fuit haec sapientia quondam,
Publica privatis secernere, sacra profanis…leges incidere lingo.

Horace, De Arte Poetica

[Amphion too, the builder of the Theban wall, was said to give the stones motion
with the sound of his lyre, and to lead them -whithersoever
he would, by engaging persuasion. This was deemed
wisdom of yore, to distinguish the public from private weal,
things sacred from things profane…to engrave laws on tables of wood.]

“Civilisations cannot be built mechanistically – there must be art as well as science. Where the stones of law are stubborn we must turn to the art of equity. If law is the mason’s art of producing rectilinear stones from the bedrock of nature, equity is the sculptor’s art of revealing the human form from within the rectilinear stone. As the great American jurist, Judge Learned Hand, once said: ‘the work of a judge is an art…[i]t is what a poet does, it is what a sculptor does’” G Watt, Equity Stirring: The Story of Justice Beyond the Law (2009)

“law matters because of death and time and our care for others. Like architecture or language, it is part of the work of cultures which seeks to reach across time, and beyond life”
Desmond Manderson, ‘Desert Island Discs (Ten reveries on pedagogy in law and the humanities)’ (2008) 2(2) Law and Humanities 255–270, 270.


Preparation:
Be prepared to provide examples (from architecture and from law) as contributions to the discussion (see next).


Seminar Outline: We will debate this question: is the law like architecture? Is architecture utilitarian, functional, economically compromised, culturally constructed, culturally reflexive, symbolic? Is the law? Consider the architectural symbolism of the following images – what do they tell us about the law? (As a fun quiz – can you name the subject and artist of each image?) Does the identity of the artist matter? Why?

























The architects of medieval cathedrals encountered the irony that a cathedral built along rectilinear lines to a great height required such thick walls and pillars to support it that the light was blocked out - thus the physical form of the building came to obscure a substantial symbol (and sense) of the spiritual enterprise. Medieval architects found a solution in the “flying buttress” – the prop of stone that pushes against the wall of the cathedral from the outside and, by opposing, supports the whole structure. The flying buttress allowed for thinner walls and wider windows and better illumination. Does the law need a flying buttress? Does the law have one?









Prof. Gary Watt's C.V.

Gary Watt (b. 1969) is a graduate of New College, Oxford University, and a qualified Solicitor (non-practising). He is currently an Associate Professor and Reader in Law at the University of Warwick, having joined Warwick Law School in 1999. Since 2005 he has also been a visiting professor in comparative common law at the Université René Descartes (Paris 5) and since 2004 he has been one of the editors of the Mortgage group in the Project for a Common Core of European Private Law based at the Università di Trento. Gary is a passionate advocate for scholarship and teaching in the various fields of law and humanities and is one of the two founding editors of Law and Humanities (Oxford, Hart publishing) - the first UK-based journal dedicated to the examination of law by the lights of humanities’ disciplines. He is the co-editor of Shakespeare and the Law (Oxford, Hart publishing, 2008) and the author of numerous books, chapters and articles, including Trusts and Equity (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2003) (currently in 3rd edition, 2008) and a forthcoming book on law and literature: Equity Stirring: The Story of Justice Beyond Law (Oxford, Hart publishing, 2009). He has also co-written for BBC Radio 3's Between the Ears strand with ‘Prix Italia’ winner Antony Pitts. Gary’s enthusiasm for his subjects (and for teaching them) has led to invitations to deliver lectures and seminars in places as diverse as Hong Kong, the US, Italy, Berlin, Paris, Amsterdam, and the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. Gary was named UK “Law Teacher of the Year” in 2009.



mercoledì 8 aprile 2009

Dr. Stefania Gialdroni's Lectures




Shakespeare in Law.
“The Merchant of Venice” and “Measure for Measure”: A legal historical perspective







Outline:
15.03.2009:
Who was William Shakespeare? Legends and exaggerations vs. historical investigation.
16.03.2009:
Equity and Discrimination.
17.03.2009:
Usury and Liberty of Contract.

Suggested readings:

Daniel J. Kornstein, Fie Upon your Law!, in “Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature”, 5.1 (1993): A Symposium Issue on “The Merchant of Venice” (Spring, 1993), pp. 35-56.

Jay L. Halio, Portia: Shakespeare’s Matlock?, in “Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature”, 5.1 (1993), A Symposium Issue on "The Merchant of Venice". (Spring, 1993), pp. 57-64.

Susan Oldrieve, Marginalized Voices in “The Merchant of Venice”, in “Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature”, 5.1 (1993): A Symposium Issue on “The Merchant of Venice” (Spring, 1993), pp. 87-105.

Stefania Gialdroni's curriulum vitae (*12.08.1977)

Stefania Gialdroni graduated in 2003 from the University of RomaTre (Law faculty), where she immediately started a collaboration with Prof. Conte, the chair of “Medieval and Modern Legal History”. In 2004 she started the “International Max-Planck Research School for Comparative Legal History” in Frankfurt am Main (Germany). In 2006 she started the Marie-Curie “European Doctorate in History, Sociology, Anthropology and Philosophy of Legal Cultures in Europe”. In the framework of the European Doctorate she spent one year (2006-2007) as a visiting PhD student at the London School of Economics (LSE) and one year as a visiting PhD student at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris (EHESS), where she is still studying at the moment.
On February 11th 2009 she received her PhD “en cotutelle” between the Universities Milano-Bicocca (Private Law and History of Private Law Legal Science) and EHESS, Paris (History and Civilisation). The title of her PhD dissertation is: “A Legal History of the East India Company. Limited Liability and Majority Principle in 17th Century England”.

lunedì 6 aprile 2009

Easter Holidays


Dear all,

this post is just to confirm that next week there won't be any Law and the Humanities talk. See you on Wednesday 15th.

Have a nice week!

giovedì 2 aprile 2009

Is law only a complicate way to affirm political power?

As a graduate in law, Kafka knew pretty well the Austrian legal system. His critics of that system is deep and hopeless. Would you share the same attitude towards law, after having learned it for years at the University? Do you know any Italian novel which shares the same pessimistic attitude Kafka shows towards the law?