Legality and Affect Left and Right – Queering Legal Orders’ Normative Force with Feeling

Laura Borchert
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Abstract

In her book From Law and Literature to Legality and Affect, Greta Olson argues for an expansive view of the legal, which encompasses both one’s Rechtsgefühl and the sociocultural normative settings one is surrounded by. Acknowledging the existence of “a variety of competing nomoi” (Olson, From Law and Literature, p.7), i.e., diverse normative environments within a given legal order, notions of law as legality, and affect as law’s new Other are conceptualized as projects fostering legal pluralism. Yet, is such a pluralistic, diversified notion of legality able to challenge those normative legal-cultural conditions which still privilege cis, male, heterosexual, White, able-bodied, propertied non-immigrants? Agreeing with Roger Cotterrell that “[l]aw’s interpretive communities now reflect the patterned differentiation of the social” ( Law, p.100), and Olson’s claim that “ideas about law are negotiated outside of the courtroom, the parliament, or even the governmental office where law and legal ordinances are directly translated into everyday life experience” ( From Law and Literature, p. 20), this article examines how legality may speak back to law, in its professionalized, dogmatic sense, and to legal orders, and analyzes in which ways an understanding of law as legality may affect LGBTQIAP* rights activism. This critical queer theoretical perspective thus challenges Olson’s nomoi by approaching the limitations of legal affects for trans and queer legal subjects. By analyzing the design and logic behind two recent cases of anti-trans bills in the U.S., Arkansas’ HB 1570 (‘Save Adolescents from Experimentation Act’) and Idaho’s HB 500 (‘Fairness in Women’s Sports Act’) from a cultural studies perspective, this article examines how an expanded understanding of law as legality may affect the gendered, cis-ed, and heteronormative nature of the U.S.’s dominant legal order(s).
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合法性与左右情感——用情感探寻法律秩序的规范性力量
格雷塔·奥尔森在《从法律和文学到合法性和情感》一书中主张对法律有一个广泛的看法,包括一个人的Rechtsgefühl和他所处的社会文化规范环境,法律作为合法性的概念,以及作为法律的新他者的影响,被概念化为促进法律多元化的项目。然而,这样一个多元化、多样化的合法性概念是否能够挑战那些仍然对独联体、男性、异性恋、白人、健全、有财产的非移民享有特权的规范性法律文化条件?同意Roger Cotterrell的观点,即“劳的解释社区现在反映了社会的模式分化”(Law,第100页),以及奥尔森的主张,即“关于法律的想法是在法庭、议会甚至政府办公室之外协商的,在那里法律和法律条例被直接转化为日常生活经验”(《法律与文学》,第20页),这篇文章探讨了合法性如何在专业化、教条化的意义上与法律和法律秩序对话,并分析了将法律理解为合法性可能在哪些方面影响LGBTQIAP*权利活动。因此,这种批判性的酷儿理论视角通过探讨跨性别和酷儿法律主体的法律影响的局限性来挑战奥尔森的诺米。通过从文化研究的角度分析美国最近两起反跨性别法案背后的设计和逻辑,阿肯色州的HB 1570(“将青少年从实验中拯救出来”)和爱达荷州的HB 500(“女性体育公平法案”),以及美国主导法律秩序的非规范性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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