| The Vestal and the Fasces |
| Prologue |
| • | I— The Vestal and the Fasces |
| • | II— The Feminine and Property |
| 1— Hegel Avec Lacan |
| I— Introduction |
| • | A— The Death of Property |
| • | B— Hegel's Totality |
| • | C— The Hole in the Whole |
| II— The Hegelian Story of Property |
| • | A— The Internalist Approach of The Philosophy of Right |
| • | B— The Artificiality of the Subject |
| • | C— The Presupposition of Human Nature |
| • | D— The Impossibility of Philosophy without Presuppositions; Sublation |
| E— The Tentative Presupposition |
| • | 1— Hegel V. Liberalism |
| • | 2— The Abstract Person and the Kantian Construct |
| • | F— The Contradictions of Personality |
| • | G— Objectification and Objects |
| H— The Elements of Property |
| • | 1— Possession |
| • | 2— Enjoyment |
| • | 3— The Triune Nature of Property |
| I— Adding the Third Term: Alienation |
| • | 1— Abandonment and Gift |
| • | 2— Exchange |
| • | J— From Hegel to Lacan |
| III— The Lacanian Story of the Feminine |
| A— Reading Lacan |
| • | 1— The Patriarchal Family |
| • | 2— The Artificiality of Sexuality |
| • | 3— Sexuality as Language |
| • | 4— The Anatomy of Truth |
| B— The Real, the Imaginary, and the Symbolic |
| • | 1— The Opening Chapters of the Psyche's Bildungsroman |
| • | 2— Longing in the Three Orders |
| C— Adding the Third Term: The Oedipal Romance |
| • | 1— Enter the Father |
| • | 2— Castration |
| • | 3— Possession, Exchange, and Sexuality |
| • | D— The Phallus, Castration, and the Imaginary Collapse of the Symbolic into the Real |
| • | E— "Woman Does Not Exist" |
| • | F— The Woman, Property, and Jouissance |
| IV— An Abduction from the Seraglio |
| • | A— Abduction and Jouissance |
| • | B— The Radical Critique Implicit in Lacan |
| 2— The Fasces: The Masculine Phallic Metaphor for Property |
| • | I— Property as the Object Petit A |
| II— The Axe: The Positive Version of the Masculine Phallic Metaphor |
| A— Waldron and the Embrace of the Masculine Phallic Metaphor |
| • | 1— Defining Property |
| • | 2— The Physicality of Property |
| • | 3— Waldron's State of Nature |
| 4— Waldron's Denial of Incorporeality |
| • | a— Need or Desire? |
| • | b— Waldron's Empirical Arguments for the Phallic Metaphor |
| B— Some Realism about Legal Surrealism: The Positive Phallic Metaphor and Ostensible Ownership |
| • | 1— Grasping at Straws |
| 2— Ostensible Ownership |
| • | a— Introduction |
| • | b— Custody as Evidence of Ownership |
| • | c— Benedict v. Ratner |
| 3— Objectification: Hegelian Possession as an Alternative to the Paradigm of the Phallic Metaphor |
| • | a— Attachment and Perfection |
| b— The Logic of Property |
| • | (1)— Classical Liberalism and Autonomy |
| • | (2)— Hegelianism and Pragmatism. |
| • | (3)— Perfection, Filing, and Control. |
| • | (4)— Benedict v. Ratner Redux |
| III— The Bundle of Sticks: The Negative Version of the Masculine Phallic Metaphor |
| A— Chix Nix Bundle-O-Stix: A Critique of the Attempted Negation of Physicality |
| • | I— Prophecies |
| 2— Vandevelde's Analysis |
| • | a— The Hohfeldian Attribution of the Phallic Metaphor to Blackstone |
| • | b— The Lacanian Argument for Locating the Phallic Metaphor in Blackstone |
| 3— Atoms V. Molecules |
| • | a— Hohfeld's Attempt to Deny the Object |
| • | b— Subjectivity, Objectivity, Intersubjectivity |
| • | 4— The Reinstatement of "Blackstonian" Property |
| 5— The Supposed Disaggregation of Property in Constitutional and Private Law |
| • | a— Physicality and the Federalists |
| • | b— The Objects of Property |
| • | c— Conceptual Severance, or "Rights Chopping." |
| • | d— Property as the Public-Private Distinction |
| B— Musings on the Myth That the Uniform Commercial Code Disaggregated and Killed Property |
| • | I— The Gates of Ivory and Horn |
| • | 2— Practical Men and Their Tangible Things |
| 3— Article 2 as Text |
| • | a— Evidence for the Disaggregation of Property |
| • | b— Article 2's Clandestine Affair with Title |
| 4— The Wit and Wisdom of Karl Llewellyn |
| • | a— Differentiating Property from Contract |
| b— The Common-Law Sales Paradigm. |
| • | (1) Horsing Around with Karl |
| • | (2)— The Process of Mercantile Sales |
| • | c— Llewellyn and Hohfeld |
| 5— Two Examples: Conditional Sales and Risk of Loss |
| • | a— Conditional Sales as Substance over Form |
| • | b— Risk of Loss and the Movement of the Indicia of Ownership |
| 6— The Continuing Primacy of Physicality in the U.C.C |
| • | a— The Primacy of Physical Custody |
| • | b— The Physical Metaphor in the Law of Sales |
| • | c— Llewellyn's "Real-ism." |
| • | d— The Imagery of Destruction and the Bundle of Sticks |
| IV— The Fasces: Axe and Bundle of Sticks |
| • | A— Constraints |
| • | B— The Denial of the Feminine |
| 3— The Vestal: The Feminine Phallic Metaphor for Property |
| I— Virgin Territory: Property as the Inviolate Feminine Body |
| A— Radin's Definition of Property |
| • | 1— The Identification with Objects |
| 2— The Elements of Property |
| • | a— Possession |
| • | b— The Fear of Alienation |
| • | 3— Enjoyment; Interference as Violation |
| • | 4— The Donning of the Chador |
| • | 5— The Inalienability of Nonbody Objects |
| • | B— Pluralism, Pragmatism, and Contradiction |
| • | C— Market Rhetoric |
| • | D— Fungible Property |
| II— A Return to Hegel's Theory of Property |
| • | A— Radin's Misreading |
| • | B— Hegel and Community |
| • | C— The Starting Presupposition of Personality |
| • | D— Limitations of Positive Law |
| • | E— Is Hegel Useful in a Feminist Challenge to Masculinism? |
| • | III— The Implications for Feminist Property Theory |
| 4— The Woman Does Not Exist: The Impossible Feminine and the Possibility of Freedom |
| I— Never Jam Today: The Impossibility of Takings Jurisprudence |
| • | A— Introduction |
| • | B— The Permissible Limitation on Property |
| C— The Liberal Dilemma of Takings Law |
| • | 1— Property and the Constitution |
| • | 2— The Supposed Disintegration of Property |
| • | 3— The Seemingly Endless Diversity of Property |
| • | 4— Rights Chopping |
| • | 5— Metonymy |
| • | D— Quality and Quantity |
| E— The Movement of Sublation |
| • | 1— Negation and Preservation |
| • | 2— Contradiction, Potentiality, and Actuality |
| • | 3— Sublation as Quantum Leap |
| F— Takings and Freedom |
| • | 1— Freedom |
| • | 2— Totalitarianism |
| II— The Impossibility of the Feminine and the Possibility of Freedom |
| • | A— Lacanian Freedom |
| • | B— I've Believed . . . Impossible Things . . . |
| • | C— The Necessary Loss of Virginity |
| Epilogue: Vesta, the Phallic Woman |
| Index |
| • | A |
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| • | C |
| • | D |
| • | E |
| • | F |
| • | G |
| • | H |
| • | I |
| • | J |
| • | K |
| • | L |
| • | M |
| • | N |
| • | O |
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| • | Q |
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| • | U |
| • | V |
| • | W |
| • | Z |