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  • Lady Justice: An Anatomy of Allegory

    Lady Justice by Hayaert, Valérie;

    An Anatomy of Allegory

    Series: Edinburgh Studies in Law, Justice and the Visual;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Edinburgh University Press
    • Date of Publication 31 December 2025
    • Number of Volumes Print PDF

    • ISBN 9781474487498
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages400 pages
    • Size 234x156 mm
    • Language English
    • 700

    Categories

    Short description:

    Dismembering and remembering the sensual and spiritual body of Lady Justice in this wholly novel interpretation of the optical allegory of Iustitia.

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    Long description:

    Lady Justice: An Anatomy of Allegory leaves conventional readings of this pivotal figure in European legal history far behind. Hayaert’s study brings together an analysis of thousands of images from the period 1400 – 1600, many of them previously overlooked, including artwork, frontispieces, legal texts, sculptures and statues in public spaces and in court buildings scattered across six countries. Lady Justice is taken apart and considered afresh - organ by organ, limb by limb, digit by digit, making a case for a treatment of allegory in all its complexity, ambiguity and affective force.
    This unique interdisciplinary study exceeds the iconographic orthodoxy of art historians and the reductive interpretations of legal historians alike. Setting aside styles and schools, ranging widely across time and space, Hayaert identifies Lady Justice as the seat of law’s conscience, an archetype of the judge’s daimon, and an affective, numinous address to all who, over the course of seven centuries, have found themselves moved by her redolent and inextinguishable presence.

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    Table of Contents:

    "

    Introduction

    Periodization; Terminus ante quem; Justitia and her siblings: the four cardinal virtues; Justitia’s avatars: an art of gestural ethics; Lady Justice’s polyonomy; Images in movement; Justicia and Vengeance; Before the Law; Sources; The two faces of Justice; Allegory as a medium for judicial reform; Interpretative plurality; Precellence’ of women?An ethics of affects?

    Chapter One: Images of Justice

    Ekphrasis: Gregor Bersman; Ekphrastic epigrams of Justice; Goddess Justitia and the paradoxes of icones symbolicae; The Divine nature of Justice; A Judicial Ekphrasis; Bersman’s emblemology: The Leipzig context; Justitia quadrata; Justice as Puritas; The Lorica Iustitiae; Books, Scales and Cornucopia; The Sword: Alienum Opus Facio; Bodily synecdoches; Conclusion; Appendix: Translation of Gregor Bersman’s Imago Justitiae

    Chapter Two: The paradoxes of Lady Justice’s blindfold

    The allegory as a composite body; A phenomenological approach to allegory; Early modern lawyers and their interpretation of the blindfold; Clarity and ecstasy; Is the blindfold an attribute? Clear-sighted Justice in Greek and Roman Antiquity; Sebastian Brandt and the fool blindfolding Justice; An astute interpretation by Pierre Ayrault; Jacob de Cater’s emblematic verses; (Extra) Sensory Perception; The diaphanous blindfold; In praise of blindness; Continuing objections to the portrait of a blindfolded justice; Sculpting Justice: The co-existence of a clear-sighted and blindfolded Justice; The polysemy of the blindfold; André de Nesmond’s Remonstrance; The Eye of the Law; Conclusion

    Chapter Three: Lady Justice’s Fingers: Gesture and Meaning

    Gestural expressivity; The extended middle-finger as part of a mnemonic technique; Transitory Hieroglyphics; The horn gesture as apotropaic; Deictic index and judicial action; Gripping and handling; Hidden or discarded scales; Power-grip and precision-handling; The power-grip pattern as a visual rhetoric for a firm metrological order; Holding the scales: an archetype of honest weighing; The watchful eye combined with precision-handling; Conclusion

    Chapter Four: Lady Justice’s Posture: Sitting, Standing or Walking?

    Judicial temperament; Sitting Judges; The Legal Status of the Sitting Judge; Sedendo et Dormiendo? The Judge as ""Throne-Sharer of Dike""; Lady Justice’s Throne; Standing Justices- The Myth of Astraea; Astraea as an Allegorical Body in Motion; Astraea as Justitia Victrix; The Departure of Astraea from Earth; Astraea, The Diva Fugax; The Countless Returns of the Goddess Astraea; Astraea before the Peasants; Seditious Lady Justice; Walking Justices; Fountains of Justice: Spatial Location and Communal Function; Reformed Cities: A New Vision of Justice; Divine Justice and Earthly Rulers; Lady Justice on the Forum; Conclusion: In the Orbit of Dame Justice

    Chapter Five: Lady Justice and the Judge’s Body: Maimed Hands, Bare Knee

    The Effigy of the Amputated Judge; A case study: Lady Justice standing in front of the penitent judge; The Maimed Hands of the Bailiff; The Missing Hands: A Shaming Ritual? A Double Effigy of Justice; Marten de Vos’ Adorodokia; Clemency; Knee Gestures; The Knee as ‘Seat of Clemency’; Lady Justice’s knee-gesture as an index of clemency; Justus Oldenkop’s frontispiece as a judicial manifesto; The Bare Knee as a Sign of Virtue in General; George Reverdy’s Allegory of Injustice; Nudity; Justitia meretrix: Lady Justice as a courtesan;Vanquishing Nudes; Conclusion

    Chapter Six: Justitia’s Body Movements: A Sensual Lesson in Symbolic Fascinatio

    A fascinating introduction; Triangle; Justitia’s Spatial Apparatus; Mechanical Justice; Kisses; The erotic kiss;The kiss in theology; The kiss in law; The kiss in politics; The kiss in economy; Polyglot and mystical kisses; Conclusion

    Chapter Seven: Lady Justice’s Fragility

    The technology of inflicting death; Bruegel’s Justitia; Sleeping Justice; Justitia’s dispassion in the stage-management of capital punishment; The two swords of Lady Justice; Justice assaulted; Justice raped; Justice shackled and disheveled; The Michelfeldt Tapestry; Justitia inter arma; Justitia Vulnerata;Oppressed Justice; Justitia at the Crossroads

    Epilogue: Why has Lady Justice survived until now?

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