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Law and the Dead: Technology, Relations and Institutions


ISBN13: 9780815375234
Published: April 2019
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £120.00



This is a Print On Demand Title.
The publisher will print a copy to fulfill your order. Books can take between 1 to 3 weeks. Looseleaf titles between 1 to 2 weeks.

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The government of the dead in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries gave rise to a new arrangement of thanato-politics in the West. Legal, medical and bureaucratic institutions developed innovative technologies for managing the dead, maximising their efficacy and exploiting their vitality. Law and the Dead writes a history of their institutional life in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

With a particular focus on the technologies of the death investigation process, including place-making, the forensic gaze, bureaucratic manuals, record-keeping and radiography, this book examines how the dead came to be incorporated into legal institutions in the modern era. Drawing on the writings of philosophers, historians and legal theorists, it offers tools for thinking through how the dead dwell in law, how their lives persist through the conduct of office, and how coroners assume responsibilities for taking care of the dead.

This historical and interdisciplinary book offers a provocative challenge to conventional thinking about the sequestration of the dead in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It asks the reader to think through and with legal institutions when writing a history of the dead, and trace the important role assumed by coroners in the government of the dead. This book will be of interest to scholars working in law, history, sociology and criminology.

Subjects:
Jurisprudence
Contents:
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1: Law in the Necropolis
Chapter 2: Visual Regimes of the Dead
Chapter 3: The Bureaucratic Logic of Office
Chapter 4: Dead Records
Chapter 5: Screening the Corpse
Bibliography
Index