« The essays in this Special Issue (guest edited by Simon Stern, University of Toronto) trace out and experiment with a wide array of connections that link the theory, history, and practice of criminal law to its literary counterparts, complements, and alternatives, looking to poetry, drama, fiction, and historical narrative along the way. They expand the historical and geographical range of the field, suggesting new opportunities for comparative research, including work that pursues comparative law in the same vein as comparative literature, and that looks at the fortunes of doctrinal concepts across time and jurisdictions »1.
Modern Criminal Law Review 1:2 (2025): Criminal Law, Literature, and History
