真正的“原则骨架”:利用计算诗歌进行批判性本土法律学术研究

IF 0.8 Q2 LAW
Alison Whittaker
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引用次数: 1

摘要

澳大利亚法律施加着垂直的力量,而且是坚定不移的。当我和人们谈论这条法律以及它对我们的影响时,我可以参与到垂直的力量中,并把所有的重量都压在他们身上。语言密集。规范正义和澳大利亚法律文本主义之间的分歧在社区中毫无意义。这是一种愤怒和徒劳的具体感觉。谁会想读另一篇期刊文章,说事情很糟糕,或者在理解它所需的工具上投资数万美元?很多,但不是我想通过这个项目接触到的人。通过诗歌,我们可以挖掘、表达和教授澳大利亚法律中的批判性土著理论和批判性白人理论,而不是通过使用其语言来压制它,或者试图通过解构它来抵制它。我们可以通过提炼法律裁决本身来做到这一点。在接下来的几页中,诗歌是一个非正式的实验项目的一部分,试图做到这一点。该项目的前三首诗出现在BLAKWORK中,重点是Trevorow、Mabo和对杜女士之死的调查。下面的诗集中在维克,沃顿,布米和卡廷耶里。对于这两个集合,我使用计算工具从近代史上涉及我们暴徒的关键法律判决中提取了大约50个最常见的三角图(三个单词的短语)。我根据他们在这些决策中的频率对他们进行了排名。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Real ‘Skeleton of Principle’: Using Computational Poetry for Critical Indigenous Legal Scholarship
Australian law exerts a vertical force and is unyielding. When I talk to people about that law and how it impacts on us, I can participate in that vertical force and put all that weight on them. The language is dense. The split between normative justice and the textualism of Australian law is no more than moot in community. It is an embodied sense of fury and futility. Who would want to read another journal article that says things are bad, or invest tens of thousands of dollars in the tools needed to comprehend it? Plenty, but not the people I want to reach with this project. Through poetry, which complains of a slim readership but can lament nothing compared to the skeletal readership of legal journals (sorry!), we can excavate, express and teach critical Indigenous theory and critical whiteness theory in Australian law — without being part of that vertical force by either pushing down using its language, or attempting to resist it by deconstructing it. We can do so by distilling legal decisions themselves. In the following pages are poems that are part of an informal and experimental project to try to do just that. The first three poems of the project appear in BLAKWORK and focus on Trevorrow, Mabo, and the Inquest into the Death of Ms Dhu. The poems below focus on Wik, Wotton, Bugmy and Kartinyeri. For both collections I used computational tools to extract the 50-or-so most common trigrams (three word phrases) from key legal decisions in recent history that concern our mobs. I ranked them in accordance with their frequency in these decisions.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
40.00%
发文量
1
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