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Let's Skill All the Lawyers: Shakespearean Lessons in Law and RhetoricHarold Anthony LloydWake Forest University School of Law March 6, 2010 6 Acta Iuridica Olomucensia 9 (2010) Abstract: Shakespeare's works present intriguing explorations of law and legal theory. They help demonstrate the flaws in command-theory positivism, natural law theory and prediction theory accounts of the law. Shakespeare's works also provide insights into a workable jurisprudence complying with the semiotics of law and its ten inherent restraints (the “semiotic decalogue”). As a semantic enterprise, the semiotics of law necessarily involves rhetoric. Concomitant with Shakespeare’s legal explorations, his works explore rhetorical theory and practice and provide useful lessons in rhetorical success and failure.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 56 Keywords: jurisprudence, Shakespeare, semiotics, semantics, natural law, positivism, rhetoric, philosophy of law, legal theory, legal philosophy Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: December 13, 2010 ; Last revised: February 20, 2013Suggested CitationContact Information
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