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Toulson & Phipps on Confidentiality

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Advocacy: A Practical
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 Peter Lyons, Chris Taylor


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Judicial Cooperation in Commercial Litigation 3rd ed (The British Cross-Border Financial Centre World)



 Ian Kawaley, David Doyle, Shade Subair Williams


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Law and Thing Theory: The Return of the Precritical


ISBN13: 9781041273509
To be Published: September 2026
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £155.00





Law and Thing Theory examines how law operates not only through words but through things, systematically conferring upon the world, the State, the people, sex, race, nature, and culture a thingly materiality treated as outside language, representation, and perception. It argues that law, in thingifying what it encounters, makes use of a precritical and authoritarian epistemology that forecloses contestation across legal and political life.

Drawing on intellectual history, critical theory, poststructuralism, linguistics, and Science & Technology Studies, the book offers a wholly original framework for understanding how thingness functions as a mode of governance. It reveals the discursive mechanics by which law renders its objects aconstructed and self-evident, producing zones of uncriticability that silence the speaking observer and narrow the space of critique. Chapter by chapter, it defines thingification as a distinct epistemic operation, traces its lineage through the history of thought, diagnoses its contemporary resurgence, maps seven domains in which law endows what it encounters with thingness, exposes the fascist grammar that shadows such epistemologies, and develops a counter-posture (countermateriality) that upholds a minimal materiality necessary for law to remain a tool of interruption and resistance. The book thus does not merely lament the return of precritical thinking. It also defends the constructivist conditions under which critique itself can survive.

This book speaks to legal scholars, legal philosophers, intellectual historians, and critical theorists, as well as anyone engaged with contemporary debates in epistemology, discourse studies, and political thought.

Subjects:
Jurisprudence
Contents:
Introduction
1. Becoming a Thing
2. Things Then and Now
3. The Golden Age of Thingification
4. Figures of Legal Thingification
5. The Fascist Grammar of Thingness
6. Countermateriality
7. Epilogue: A Dinner at Fayard