Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012
article
Contents, acknowledgements and contributors
Luis Gomez Romero and Ian Dahlman
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 1-426
Introduction - Justice framed: law in comics and graphic novels
Luis Gomez Romero and Ian Dahlman
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 3-32
The legal surrealism of George Herriman's Krazy Kat
Ian Dahlman
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 35-64
'What had been many became one': continuity, the common law, and Crisis on Infinite Earths
Benjamin Authers
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 65-92
Justice in the gutter: representing everyday trauma in the graphic novels of Art Spiegelman
Karen Crawley and Honni van Rijswijk
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 93-118
'Sakaarson the World Breaker': violence and différance in the political and legal theory of Marvel's sovereign
Chris Lloyd
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 119-154
Chewing in the name of justice: the taste of law in action
Anita Lam
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 155-182
Magic and modernity in Tintin au Congo (1930) and the Sierra Leone Special Court
René Provost
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 183-216
Spider-Man, the question and the meta-zone: exception, objectivism and the comics of Steve Ditko
Jason Bainbridge
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 217-242
Comic book mythology: Shyamalan’s Unbreakable and the grounding of good in evil
Timothy D Peters
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 243-276
‘Come a Day there Won’t be Room for Naughty Men Like Us to Slip About at All’: the multi-media outlaws of Serenity and the possibilities of post-literate justice
Kieran Tranter
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 277-304
The punisher and the politics of retributive justice
Kent Worcester
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 329-352
‘Riddle me this…?’ Would the world need superheroes if the law could actually deliver ‘justice’?
Cassandra Sharp
2012-01-01 Volume 16 • Issue 1 • 2012 • 353-378