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Flags, Color, and the Legal Narrative - Public Memory, Identity, and Critique (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2021)
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Flags, Color, and the Legal Narrative - Public Memory, Identity, and Critique (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2021)
Series: Law and Visual Jurisprudence, 1
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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On behalf of Professor Hugh Brady, Director and Senior Fellow, The
Flag Research Center at the University of Texas School of Law,
"Flags, Color, and the Legal Narrative: Public Memory, Identity,
and Critique (Springer 2021) has been selected as the recipient of
our Gherardi Davis Prize is presented for a significant
contribution to vexillological research for the year 2021. This
work was selected because of its breadth and depth in examining
flags as meaningful transmitters of significant symbolic
information concerning the origins, culture, self-image, and values
of a society. We believe it represents a signal achievement in the
study of flags that sets a new standard for research in the field."
The Flag Research Center, founded in 1962, is dedicated to
furthering knowledge and advancing understanding of the human need
to create and use symbols to express political, cultural, and
social ideals through flags and flag-related material culture. The
book deals with the identification of "identity" based on
culturally specific color codes and images that conceal assumptions
about members of a people comprising a nation, or a people within a
nation. Flags narrate constructions of belonging that become
tethered to negotiations for power and resistance over time and
throughout a people's history. Bennet (2005) defines identity as
"the imagined sameness of a person or social group at all times and
in all circumstances". While such likeness may be imagined or even
perpetuated, the idea of sameness may be socially, politically,
culturally, and historically contested to reveal competing pasts
and presents. Visually evocative and ideologically representative,
flags are recognized symbols fusing color with meaning that
prescribe a story of unity. Yet, through semiotic confrontation,
there may be different paths leading to different truths and
applications of significance. Knowing this and their function, the
book investigates these transmitted values over time and space.
Indeed, flags may have evolved in key historical periods, but
contemporaneously transpire in a variety of ways. The book
investigates these transmitted values: Which values are being
transmitted? Have their colors evolved through space and time? Is
there a shift in cultural and/or collective meaning from one space
to another? What are their sources? What is the relationship
between law and flags in their visual representations? What is the
shared collective and/or cultural memory beyond this visual
representation? Considering the complexity and diversity in the
building of a common memory with flags, the book interrogates the
complex color-coded sign system of particular flags and their
meanings attentive to a complex configuration of historical, social
and cultural conditions that shift over time. Advance Praise for
Flags, Color, and the Legal Narrative "In an epoch of
fragmentation, isolation and resurgent nationalism, the flag is
waved but often forgotten. The flag, its colors, narratives, shape
and denotations go without saying. The red flag over China, the
Star-Spangled Banner, the Tricolore are instantly recognisable and
over determined, representing a people, a nation, a culture,
languages, legacies, leaders. In this fabulous volume flags are
revealed as concentrated, complex, chromatic assemblages of people,
place and power in and through time. It is in bringing a multifocal
awareness of the modes and meanings of flag and color in public
representations that is particular strength. Editors Anne Wagner
and Sarah Marusek have gathered critical thinkers from the North
and South, East and West, to help know the essential and central -
yet often forgotten and not seen - work of flags and color in
narratives of nation, conflict, struggle and law. A kaleidoscopic
contribution to the burgeoning field of visual jurisprudence, this
volume is essential to comprehending the ocular machinery through
which power makes, and is seen to make, the world."Kieran Tranter,
Chair of Law, Technology and Future, Faculty of Law, Queensland
University of Technology, Australia "This comprehensive volume of
essays could not be arriving at a more opportune time. The combined
forces of climate change, inequality, and pandemic are causing
instability and painful recognitions of our collective
uncertainties about nationhood and globalism. In the United States,
where I am writing these few lines, our traditional red/white/blue
flag has been collapsed into two colors: Red and Blue. While these
colors have semiotically deep texts, the division of the country
into these two colors began with television stations designing how
to report the vote count in the 2000 presidential election year
creating "red" and "blue" parties and states. The colors stuck and
have become customary. We Americans are told all the time by
pundits that we are a deeply divided nation, as proven by unsubtle
colored maps. To a statistician, we are a Purple America, though
the color is unequally distributed. White, the color of negotiation
and peace is rarely to be found. To begin to approach understanding
the problems flagged in my brief account requires the insight of
multiple disciplines. That is what Wagner and Marusek, wonderful
scholars in their own work, have assembled as editors -- a
conversation among scholars at the forefront of thinking about how
flags and colors represent those who claim them thus exemplifying
how to resist simple explanations and pat answers. The topic is
just too important."Christina Spiesel, Senior Research Scholar in
Law, Yale Law School; Adjunct Professsor of Law, Quinnipiac
University School of Law, USA "Visuals, such as symbols and images,
in addition to conventional textual forms, seem to have a unique
potential for the study of a collective identity of a community and
its traditions, as well as its narratives, and at the same time, in
the expression of one's ideas, impressions, and ideologies in a
specific socio-political space. Visual analysis thus has become a
well-established domain of investigations focusing on how various
forms of text-external semiotic resources, such as culturally
specific symbols, including patterns and colors, make it possible
for scholars to account for and thus demystify discursive symbols
in a wider social and public space. Flags, Identity, Memory:
Critiquing the Public Narrative through Colors, as an international
and interdisciplinary volume, is a unique attempt to demystify the
thinking, values, assumptions and ideologies of specific nations
and their communities by analyzing their choice of specific
patterns and colors represented in a national flag. It offers a
comprehensive and insightful range of studies of visual and hidden
discursive processes to understand social narratives through
patterns of colours in the choice of national flags and in turn to
understand their semiotic, philosophical, and legal cultures and
traditions. Wagner and Marusek provide an exclusive opportunity to
reflect on the functions, roles, and limits of visual and
discursive representations. This volume will be a uniquely
resourceful addition to the study of semiotics of colours and
flags, in particular, how nations and communities represent their
relationship between ideology and pragmatism in the repository of
identity, knowledge and history."Vijay K Bhatia, Chinese University
of Hong Kong, Full Professor, Hong Kong "In all societies, colors
play a critical function in the realm of symbolism. Nation
societies perceive great significance in the colors of flags and
national emblems. Colors constitute, in other words, sign systems
of national identity. The relation of color codes and their
relation to concepts of nationhood and its related narratives is
the theme of this marvelous and eye-opening collection of studies.
Flags are mini-texts on the inherent values and core concepts that
a nation espouses and for this reason the colors that they bear can
be read at many levels, from the purely representational to the
inherently cultural. Written by experts in various fields this
interdisciplinary anthology will be of interest to anyone in the
humanities, social sciences, jurisprudence, narratology, political
science, and semiotics. It will show how a seemingly decorative
aspect of nationhood-the colors on flags-tells a much deeper story
about the human condition."Marcel Danesi, University of Toronto,
Full Professor of Anthropology, Canada
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