
| Broken justice: justice and relativism in the work of Friedrich Durenmatt |
| Desacralized law: Shakespeare and the tragedy of sovereignity |
| Digging holes and the building walls: spatial imaginations of the law in stories by Franz Kafka and Rachel Shihor |
| Law, politics, and liberal hope: a literary and anthropological analysis of secular society |
| Law's dark clarity: Hugo and the 'Misery' of legal categorizations |
| Political theology from Satan to legitimacy |
| Secularization as a paradigm of 'cross-thought' |
| Spatial vulnerability at the spectral threshold |
| An uncertain secularisation: reproductive rights in contemporary Italy |
| Books, broadcaster and the BBC: the conversation among British modern literature, media and law |
| Contemporary art in the aftermath of legal positivism: the 'other' contract art as material jurisprudence |
| Dis-affective justice in Abderrahmane Sissako's Bamako (2006) |
| Dystopian images of law and visual performances of identity in Suzanne Collins' The Hunger Games |
| Falling man and the aesthetics of terrorism |
| Foreword: Law and art in the aftermath |
| 'NO GO': artists, trespass and the aftermath occupation |
| The right(s) to remain: art, asylum and political representation in Australia |