Re-envisioning Astraea: Myth and Vision in Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized”

Poetic and pictorial rewritings of the myth of Astraea have often sought to legitimize political regimes, with the return of the goddess of justice symbolizing the inauguration of a new golden age. Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized” offers a fascinating counter-example. This unfinished essay...

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Main Author: Claire Wrobel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Société d'Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles 2024-12-01
Series:XVII-XVIII
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/1718/12988
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author Claire Wrobel
author_facet Claire Wrobel
author_sort Claire Wrobel
collection DOAJ
description Poetic and pictorial rewritings of the myth of Astraea have often sought to legitimize political regimes, with the return of the goddess of justice symbolizing the inauguration of a new golden age. Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized” offers a fascinating counter-example. This unfinished essay presents a play transcribing a vision which had appeared to the reformer in a dream. The role of the goddess, who embodies “universal jurisprudence”, is here to reveal to the audience the real state of English institutions and to introduce the utilitarian principles which would make it possible to reform them. After analysing the processes used to transcribe the vision by drawing on the “visual turn” recently taken in the field of law and literature, the article shows how Bentham’s rewriting leads us to reconsider the ideological functions of myth and seeks to account for the unexpected appearance of another allegorical figure, namely the goddess of fiction.
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spelling doaj-art-e7f71db2d0774a29872024408f7e55e52025-01-10T14:08:57ZengSociété d'Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe sièclesXVII-XVIII0291-37982117-590X2024-12-018110.4000/130q1Re-envisioning Astraea: Myth and Vision in Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized”Claire WrobelPoetic and pictorial rewritings of the myth of Astraea have often sought to legitimize political regimes, with the return of the goddess of justice symbolizing the inauguration of a new golden age. Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized” offers a fascinating counter-example. This unfinished essay presents a play transcribing a vision which had appeared to the reformer in a dream. The role of the goddess, who embodies “universal jurisprudence”, is here to reveal to the audience the real state of English institutions and to introduce the utilitarian principles which would make it possible to reform them. After analysing the processes used to transcribe the vision by drawing on the “visual turn” recently taken in the field of law and literature, the article shows how Bentham’s rewriting leads us to reconsider the ideological functions of myth and seeks to account for the unexpected appearance of another allegorical figure, namely the goddess of fiction.https://journals.openedition.org/1718/12988lawfictionJeremy BenthamWilliam BlackstoneAstraeamyth
spellingShingle Claire Wrobel
Re-envisioning Astraea: Myth and Vision in Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized”
XVII-XVIII
law
fiction
Jeremy Bentham
William Blackstone
Astraea
myth
title Re-envisioning Astraea: Myth and Vision in Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized”
title_full Re-envisioning Astraea: Myth and Vision in Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized”
title_fullStr Re-envisioning Astraea: Myth and Vision in Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized”
title_full_unstemmed Re-envisioning Astraea: Myth and Vision in Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized”
title_short Re-envisioning Astraea: Myth and Vision in Jeremy Bentham’s “Blackstone Familiarized”
title_sort re envisioning astraea myth and vision in jeremy bentham s blackstone familiarized
topic law
fiction
Jeremy Bentham
William Blackstone
Astraea
myth
url https://journals.openedition.org/1718/12988
work_keys_str_mv AT clairewrobel reenvisioningastraeamythandvisioninjeremybenthamsblackstonefamiliarized