Show simple item record

FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorvan Rijswijk, Honni
dc.date2008-01-01
dc.date.accessioned2009-02-10
dc.date.available2009-02-10
dc.date.issued2008-12-10
dc.identifier.citationLaw and Society Association Australia and New Zealand (LSAANZ) Conference 2008 ‘W(h)ither Human Rights’ 10-12 December University of Sydneyen
dc.identifier.isbn978-1-74210-098-2
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2123/4044
dc.description.abstractWhy is there such a discrepancy between legal time and historical time? Or rather, whose historical time is tacitly represented and silently justified in legal representations? Whose interests are served by the law’s particular fictions and whose injuries are privileged? In exploring these questions I will focus on the 2006 case of In re African- American Slave Descendants, a claim made for reparations for slavery in the U.S. Since the 1980s a number of litigants have filed claims for injuries arising out of slavery and none has succeeded, but these very failures are worth examining for what they reveal about the contemporary inability to reconcile the demands of the past on the present. Throughout the twentieth century, historians challenged the idea that we have transparent access to historical truths, which has obvious implications for the status of the legal text; and yet the law itself has remained largely untouched by these insights. However, I argue that reparations cases can be read as theorising a new relationship between law and history, and as interventions in the law’s logic of time. Reparations claims intercept legal logic in at least two important ways: first, by insisting on the continuing damage of slavery, the claims defy positivist representations of history and time; and second, in their reliance on the legal fiction of corporate identity across time, these cases allude to the interconnected history of the fictions of corporate and slave identities, and potentially rework these fictions in the direction of social justice.en
dc.description.sponsorshipThis conference has been generously sponsored by the School of Social and Political Sciences and the Sydney Law School, University of Sydney, in collaboration with the School of Law, University of Western Sydneyen
dc.language.isoen_AUen
dc.rightsLaw and Society Association of Australia and New Zealand Incen
dc.subjectReparationsen
dc.subjectHistory of Slaveryen
dc.subjectLaw and Literatureen
dc.subjectCorporate Personhooden
dc.subjectToni Morrisonen
dc.titleThe Poetics and Politics of Past Injuries: Claiming in Reparations Law and in Toni Morrison's novel Beloveden
dc.typeConference paperen


Show simple item record

Associated file/s

Associated collections

Show simple item record

There are no previous versions of the item available.