Erika Rackley
When Hercules met the Happy Prince: Re-Imagining the Judge
Rackley, Erika
Authors
Abstract
Although often dismissed as a myth, the image of the judge as a Herculean superhero whose mission is to apply the law in a straightforward way retains a tenacious grip on our understandings of the judge and judging. The relationship between Oscar Wilde's Happy Prince and Hercules is one of un comfort able similarity and difference. Like the Happy Prince, the Herculean judge who inhabits the legal imagination stands alone high upon Mount Olympus invisibly clothed with the appearance of neutrality and objectivity; our infatuation with this aesthetic image securing his position and role, his imposed beauty mirroring the golden faj:ade ofthe Happy Prince. Yet, increasingly this image ofthe Herculean judge, like that ofthe Happy Prince toward the end of his story, is perceived to be somewhat shabby and in need of renovation. However, unlike Hercules, stripped of his aesthetic faj:ade, the Happy Prince retains his appeal. Although this is not traditionally part of the Herculean myth, can we not look for it nevertheless? At the very least, we might seize the opportunity presented by Hercules's apparent need for renovation to envisage a judge with an appeal not dissimilar to Wilde's statue, to consider the importance of empathy and connection in judgment and, in so doing, begin to reimagine the judge.
Citation
Rackley, E. (2005). When Hercules met the Happy Prince: Re-Imagining the Judge. Texas Wesleyan law review, 12(1), 213-232
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Publication Date | Oct 1, 2005 |
Deposit Date | Jul 14, 2011 |
Journal | Texas Wesleyan law review |
Print ISSN | 1081-5449 |
Publisher | Texas Wesleyan Law Review |
Peer Reviewed | Not Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 12 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 213-232 |
Keywords | Adjudication, Connection, Empathy, Judging. |
Publisher URL | http://law.txwes.edu/LawReview/Publications/tabid/695/Default.aspx |
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