
Art of Judgement
Author(s) -
Nicole Rogers,
Greta Bird
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
public space
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1835-0550
DOI - 10.5130/psjlsj.v3i1.1225
Subject(s) - judgement , clothing , art , law , art history , history , visual arts , political science
We performed this paper at the Judicial Reasoning: Art or Science? conference held at the Australian National University in February 2009. We were performing on at least two levels: as academics and editors of a collection of judicially-authored essays on the art of judging but also, as we proclaimed at the outset, as Jester and Fool. We did not appear in costume as jesters or fools. We did not even appear as fairies, although one of us is well-known at Southern Cross University for donning fairy wings and fairy tales featured in this performance (as did sheep, land rights and playfulness). But then, our audience of judges had also left their costumes behind; there were no wigs or robes. They were in civilian clothes, recognisable only as judges through name tags. They were, in fact, unmasked.