7 - 20 What's Legit? Introduction (Liza Mattutat, Roberto Nigro, Nadine Schiel, Heiko Stubenrauch)23 - 46 Against Law: The 1960s Anti-Juridical Moment in France (Laurent de Sutter)47 - 62 On Thinking and Feeling: The Law of Cultural Heritage (Susanne Krasmann)63 - 94 Intensive Listening: Unfolding the Notion of Justice Through Reading the Work of Lawrence Abu Hamdan (Fares Chalabi)97 - 110 Women in Europe: A Variable Geometry Citizenship (Alisa Del Re)111 - 128 Instituting Revisited: For a Materialistic Conception of the Institution (Paolo Napoli)131 - 156 "...as if it were a thing": A Feminist Critique of Consent (Daniel Loick)157 - 176 Rethinking the Law: Taking Clues from Ubuntu Philosophy (Franziska Dübgen)179 - 196 Specters of Critique: Hauntology and the Ghosts of Law (Peter Goodrich)197 - 216 On the Run from the Law: Alexander Kluge's "Yesterday Girl" as Cinematic Institution of Subsumption (Manuela Klaut)219 - 244 Genealogy, Paradox, Transformation: Basic Elements of a Critique of Rights (Christoph Menke)245 - 262 The Anarchy of Rights: On the Dialectic of Freedom and Authority (Benno Zabel)263 - 292 Deforming Rights: Arendt's Theory of a Claim to Law (Jonas Heller)
Nadine Schiel is a research associate at the Institute of Philosophy and Sciences of Art at the Leuphana University Lüneburg Sciences of Art and part of the DFG research training group "Cultures of Critique."
Liza Mattutat is a PhD student at Leuphana University Lüneburg. She studied literature and philosophy at TU Darmstadt. From 2016 to 2019 she worked as a research assistant within the DFG research training group "Cultures of Critique." From 2015 to 2016 she was part of the DFG research group "Beyond a Politics of Punishment," based at Kassel University. Her interests lie in philosophy of law, political philosophy, critical theory and French philosophy. She is currently writing her PhD thesis, which relates philosophical critiques of law to current legal politics from a feminist perspective.
Heiko Stubenrauch is Research Assistant at the Institute of Philosophy and Science of Art at Leuphana University Lüneburg. He studied philosophy, sociology, economics, cultural studies and art history in Frankfurt, Lüneburg and Hamburg. From 2016 to 2019 he worked as a researcher and PhD student within the DFG research training group "Cultures of Critique." He has published on critical theory, political philosophy and philosophy of technology. He is co-editor of What's Legit? Criticism of Law and Strategies of Rights (Zurich: diaphanes, 2020). His main research interests are the Frankfurt School, poststructuralism, German Idealism, Marxism, aesthetics and theories of the unconscious. In his PhD thesis, he examines the relationship between critique and affect, especially in the works of Kant, Adorno and Deleuze.
Roberto Nigro ist Professor für Philosophie am Institut für Philosophie und Kunstwissenschaft der Leuphana Universität Lüneburg und derzeit Dekan der Fakultät Kulturwissenschaften. Er ist zudem ancien directeur de programme am Collège International de Philosophie in Paris. Er war zuvor Dozent an der Zürcher Hochschule der Künste. Als Gastprofessor und visiting scholar unterrichtete er in verschiedenen Universitäten in Frankreich, Italien, den Vereinigten Staaten, und der Schweiz. Seine theoretischen Interessen liegen in der Tradition des Operaismus und Neo-Operaismus, im Werk Michel Foucaults (insbesondere in seiner Auseinandersetzung mit Marx und dem Erbe der Philosophie Nietzsches).