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- W2023684261 abstract "There is an implicit claim in Professor Jackson's Semiotics and Legal Theoty. It is that through French semiotics he has discovered the legal philosopher's stone: semiotics will turn the law's rhetoric, image and ideology into the law's truth. The book is an important achievement and as a pioneering work raises more questions than it answers. The structure of the book outwardly follows a straightforward plan: first, revealing the magic of semiology; second, applying it earnestly to bring out the deficiencies in the work of HIlart, MacCormick, Kelsen and Dworkin; and, finally, in a preliminary way, revealing the true metal of a semiological theory of law. Some of the book's serious deficiencies are the effects of undertaking so much within 310 pages of text. For within this plan things go somewhat wrong, partly through the lack of clarity of exposition, partly through the absence of a cogent inner argument. Semiology (or semiotics) was defined by the founder of the modern semiotic movement, Saussure, as 'the science that studies the life of signs within society'. Semiology, he believed, would show what constitutes signs and what laws govern them.2 Linguistics was only a part of this general science. Semiology would discover the laws applicable to the signs employed in language and to the signs in social life more generally. He expected that the semiotic study of social life, including myths, rituals and customs, would shed new light on social facts and demonstrate their controlling semiotic laws. The subsequent fate of semiology is extremely complex.3 Essentially, Saussure's analysis of language in terms of interacting structures which generate meaning has become the model for an explication of social and cultural phenomena as kinds of communication. In other words, the linguistic model became a general social model. In addition, a Marxist tendency, the critique of ideology, has incorporated semiological ideas in uncovering the working of social power in distorting communication.4" @default.
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- W2023684261 date "1987-01-01" @default.
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- W2023684261 title "THE SEMIOLOGY OF LAW" @default.
- W2023684261 doi "https://doi.org/10.1093/ojls/7.3.475" @default.
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