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Language and the Law With a Foreword by Roger W. Shuy

by Sanford Schane

Looks at the common areas of interaction between linguistics and the legal process

  • Imprint: Continuum
  • Pub. date: 09 Oct 2006
  • ISBN: 9780826488299
224 Pages, paperback World rights
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  • Also available in: hardcover
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Description

'This book is the product of a distinguished linguist's many years of fruitful thinking about important areas in both language and the law.'

Professor Roger W. Shuy, from the Foreword. 

Language and the Law looks at some common areas of interaction between linguistics and the legal process. Each chapter pairs a problem in language with a corresponding issue in law. Sanford Schane thoroughly examines each topic both from a legal point of view and a linguistic perspective, using excerpts from cases where judges in their decisions have had to confront particular legal issues having linguistic consequences. The book requires no previous background in law or linguistics, as all concepts and notions from the two fields are explained in a non-technical manner.

This fascinating introduction to the intersection of language and law will be of interest to professionals from both fields as well as to students and general readers encountering this interdisciplinary area for the first time.

Table of Contents

Preface by Roger W. Shuy

Introduction

1. Ambiguity in Language and Misunderstanding in Law

2. Linguistic Metaphor and Legal Fiction

3. Speech Acts and Legal Hearsay

4. Speech Acts and Legal Promises in Contract Law

Conclusion

Appendix: Extracts from Sample Cases

References

Author(s)

Sanford Schane, Sanford Schane is Research Professor of Linguistics at the University of California, San Diego, USA.

Reviews

mention- Book News Inc./ August 2007

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'This work is and important addition to the literature on language and the law, and is particularly to be welcomed for extending discussion of the legal relevance of theories of metaphor and speech acts. Schane's analysis is both accessible and lucid.'
 
Christopher Hutton, Journal of Sociolinguistics, 2008.

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