Jurisdiction in Deleuze: The Expression and Representation of
Law explores an affinity between the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze
and jurisprudence as a tradition of technical legal thought. The
author addresses and reopens a central aesthetic problem in
jurisprudence: the difference between the expression and the
representation of law. Deleuze is taken as offering not just an
important methodological recovery of an 'expressionism' in
philosophy - specifically through Nietzsche and Spinoza - but also
a surprisingly practical jurisprudence which recasts the major
technical terms of jurisdiction (persons, things and actions) in
terms of their distinctively expressive or performative modalities.
In paying attention to law's expression, Deleuze is thus shown to
offer an account of how meaning may attach to the instrument and
medium of law and how legal desire may be registered within the
texture and technology of jurisdiction.
Contributing both to a renewed transposition of Deleuze into
contemporary legal theory, as well as to an emerging interest in
law's technology, institution and instrumentality in critical legal
studies, Jurisdiction in Deleuze will be of considerable
interest.
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