Lexington Books
Pages: 188
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-1318-9 • Hardback • February 2008 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
Stephen L. Bishop is associate professor of French and Francophone literature at the University of New Mexico.
Chapter 1 Prologue: "I Cannot Write in Their Place"
Chapter 2 Introduction: Why Cameroon Matters
Chapter 3 1 Why Law and Literature Matters in the African Context
Chapter 4 2 Always Already Outlawed
Chapter 5 3 Clando Writing and Judicious Reading
Chapter 6 4 Legally Appropriate Appropriation
Chapter 7 5 Writing Clados and Reading Juridis
Chapter 8 Bibliography
Stephen Bishop's work on the legal oppositional narrative in both fictional and actual cases from Cameroon affirms the ongoing necessity to engage in a discourse rife with strategies that avoid open rebellion in favor of irony, parody, humor and derision, thereby attacking the institutions by manipulation of their own codes of expression. In the context of law and literature, Bishop breaks new ground by proposing a rare glimpse into the African experience, extrapolated from his own rich experience in Cameroon.
— Jacquie Berben, Université de Nice, France
Stephen Bishop examines a simple idea — telling stories through law — from a variety of critical perspectives. His use of Cameroon as a case study illuminates the complex relationships between law, the individual and dominant discourses and institutions. This is a rich and satisfying study.
— Bruce Carolan, Head of the School of Social Sciences and Law at the Dublin Institute of Technology in Ireland
Bishop uses a variety of legal narratives in both French and English: plays, short stories, novels, and legal documents to illustrate the range of their ability to influence - or not - Cameroon's legal system.
— Eloise Briere, Albany University; Research in African Literatures
This book breaks new ground in African studies and is a worthy contribution to the fields of law and literature.
— Frieda Ekotto, associate professor of French and francophone studies at the University of Michigan