Simon Stern
Simon Stern
@simon8.bsky.social

Law & Literature, legal history, criminal law, IP, 18c/19C British literature || U of Toronto Law & English || OUP Law & Lit series http://tinyurl.com/y7fhvh36 || Oxford Hbk of Law & Humanities http://tinyurl.com/y95rdzl3 || SSRN https://tinyurl.com/SSRNss .. more

Law 58%
Political science 13%
The deadline for paper proposals has been extended to

🗓️ 16 January 2026!

We would be grateful if you could forward this call to your respective networks, particularly those in the humanities.

Please find details for the call for paper here: ishtip.org/forthcoming-...

Reposted by Simon Stern

Yeah, this is *legal* corpus linguistics. Not at all the same thing. Corpus linguistics in linguistics is actually kind of awesome. A little primer with examples in Part I here (and an explanation of why the two things share a name but not a methodology):
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
Legal Corpus Linguistics and the Half Empirical Attitude
Legal writers have recently turned to corpus linguistics to interpret legal texts. Corpus linguistics, a social-science methodology, provides a sophisticated wa
papers.ssrn.com

just out: The Place of Race in Law & Literature; Guest Editors: Andrew Bricker, Cedric Essi & @elisewang.bsky.social : www.tandfonline.com/toc/neje20/2... w essays by Almas Khan, Emma Brush, @jackquirk.bsky.social, Faith Barter, more! @lpcprof.bsky.social @law-and-humanities.bsky.social
European Journal of English Studies
The Place of Race in Law & Literature; Guest Editors: Andrew Bricker, Cedric Essi and Elise Wang. Volume 29, Issue 1 of European Journal of English Studies
www.tandfonline.com

Reposted by Simon Stern

My latest piece "Gerald Murnane's Terra Nullius" has just been published in MFS' latest issue. Thanks to @moniquerooney.bsky.social, @tynedaile.bsky.social and those at CALC for letting me present an earlier version of this piece. Check it out over here: muse.jhu.edu/article/977805
muse.jhu.edu

Jack Quirk, "Gerald Murnane’s Terra Nullius" - just out in MFS: muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/articl... : Murnane puts to work settler-colonial myths of empty land, property, and possession; this work dramatizes the imaginative and juridical mechanisms by which terra nullius was rendered present and real.
Project MUSE - Gerald Murnane’s <i>Terra Nullius</i>
muse.jhu.edu

I did not know that! But I believe it was when Kagan was dean? It certainly had a very dramatic effect.

As Dorothy Parker said, change one letter and you have the story of my life.
WINTER Term Card:

We are excited to share our seminar schedule for next term! Our slate of speakers cover a range of #18thc British history topics.

Registrations are now open (with paper abstracts) at the link below 👎

@ihr.bsky.social @ihrlibrary.bsky.social

www.history.ac.uk/news-events/...

If you have access to Oxford Scholarship Online, you can now read Geoffrey Baker's new book, Belief in Evidence in the 19C Novel, an analysis of key aspects of evidence law in conjunction with nineteenth-century novels: age, experience, character, and otherness global.oup.com/academic/pro...

Reposted by Simon Stern

They don’t want you to hear this song.

yikes! I guess that must have been more painful.

The Dental Review, 1892: "Bananas are again plenty in the market , and we frequently see some very expeditious moves , aided by the treacherous " peel " as we pace the streets."
www.google.ca/books/editio...
The Dental Review
www.google.ca

it just ain't that hard to understand Rule 6(f) of the Fed R Crim P. Not one of those you need to read a lot of cases and lawyertalk to get ...

There's a little book we like to call the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. Not a bad idea to read it first if you plan to prosecute a federal case.

posting the full ToC for those who'd like to see it

So many fantastic contributions to this issue, thanks @juliestonepeters.bsky.social and Lindsay Stern for organizing it!
TECHNIQUES OF LEGAL PERSONHOOD, ed Lindsay Stern & me! Essays: Emily Apter, Jeannine DeLombard, Daniel Heller-Roazen, Renisa Mawani, Andreas PhilippopoulosM, Alain Pottage, Paul Saint-Amour, @lsiraganian.bsky.social, Lindsay, @simon8.bsky.social, Patricia Williams! online.ucpress.edu/representati...
Volume 172 Issue 1 | Representations | University of California Press
online.ucpress.edu

Reposted by Simon Stern

TECHNIQUES OF LEGAL PERSONHOOD, ed Lindsay Stern & me! Essays: Emily Apter, Jeannine DeLombard, Daniel Heller-Roazen, Renisa Mawani, Andreas PhilippopoulosM, Alain Pottage, Paul Saint-Amour, @lsiraganian.bsky.social, Lindsay, @simon8.bsky.social, Patricia Williams! online.ucpress.edu/representati...
Volume 172 Issue 1 | Representations | University of California Press
online.ucpress.edu

Reposted by Simon Stern

My incredible book cover is based on an illustration drawn from this!

Miller, D.A., heart of, broken by a cardiologist [see index]

I demand sandwich-proof vests!!

I demand one of those immediate appeal injunc stop do-over things!!

a proud tradition since 1670! utoronto.scholaris.ca/items/a683f3...

shouldn't that be - The Ovaltine Office?
I'm thrilled to see that the special issue of ECS, "Eighteenth-Century Coasts," is finally out today! Check out my essay on coral, and many other fantastic contributions: muse.jhu.edu/issue/55889
Project MUSE - Eighteenth-Century Studies-Volume 59, Number 1, Fall 2025
muse.jhu.edu

sorry, my bad attempt at humor ... all 3 were known for writing in the first person, inhabiting the persona of someone who is semi-illitrit
Excited to reveal the cover of my book, MIDDLEMEN: LITERARY AGENTS AND THE MAKING OF AMERICAN FICTION, which is available for pre-order now!

I think they are using "much less" to mean "not even" -- a long-attested usage going back to George Ade, Anita Loos, and Ring Lardner
A new special issue of English Studies I'm really keen to put together! Please consider submitting and circulate widely! @drchrislouttit.bsky.social bookshoplit.com/cfp-booksell...
CFP: Bookselling and Literature
Bookselling and LiteratureA Special Issue of English Studies Guest Editor: Matthew Chambers (matthew.chambers@uj.edu.pl) One of the best-known literary friendships was formed in a bookshop, and one…
bookshoplit.com

Reposted by Simon Stern