"船在海上航行":隐喻与海商法

IF 1.2 1区 历史学 0 MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES
Hayley Cotter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文提出了一种研究早期现代法律隐喻的新方法。文章认为,对隐喻的全面阐述必须整合其法律-历史、文化、文学和哲学维度。在讨论了早期现代法律隐喻的独特之处(因此在解读时也具有独特的挑战性)之后,我考虑了各种从哲学、法律、认知和文学角度研究这一修辞格的方法,并展示了每种视角如何为在司法语境中解读这一修辞格增添新的洞察力。文章最后对约翰-埃克斯顿(John Exton)律师的论文《海洋学,或英格兰的海洋管辖权》(1664 年)中的一个隐喻进行了解读:"船在海上航行"。最终,我认为这个隐喻指的是海事诉讼中的物权诉讼,而物权诉讼是 16 世纪和 17 世纪英国高等海事法院运作中不可或缺的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“The Ship Dieth at Sea”: Metaphor and Maritime Law
This article proposes a new methodology for engaging with early modern legal metaphor. It argues that a full account of the trope must integrate its legal-historical, cultural, literary, and philosophical dimensions. After discussing what makes early modern legal metaphor unique (and thus uniquely challenging to decipher), I consider various philosophical, legal, cognitive, and literary approaches to the rhetorical figure and demonstrate how each perspective adds additional insight to its untangling in juridical contexts. The article culminates in a reading of a single metaphor taken from lawyer John Exton's treatise “The maritime dicæologie, or, the Sea-jurisdiction of England” (1664): “The ship dieth at sea.” Ultimately, I argue that this metaphor references admiralty actions in rem, which were integral to the functioning of the sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English High Court of Admiralty, an interpretation that emerges only when accounting for the trope in both its textual and intertextual frameworks.
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来源期刊
RENAISSANCE QUARTERLY
RENAISSANCE QUARTERLY MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
16.70%
发文量
108
期刊介绍: Starting with volume 62 (2009), the University of Chicago Press will publish Renaissance Quarterly on behalf of the Renaissance Society of America. Renaissance Quarterly is the leading American journal of Renaissance studies, encouraging connections between different scholarly approaches to bring together material spanning the period from 1300 to 1650 in Western history. The official journal of the Renaissance Society of America, RQ presents twelve to sixteen articles and over four hundred reviews per year.
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