Guidelines
Two ways of understanding human behavior:
1) The nature of Literature
– The nature of literature is to open the possibilities of understanding human problems (Bakhtin and the arts);
– Literature is free and creative in choosing the point of view of analysis and, therefore, is close to the immediately felt;
– Literature has objective-subjective criteria for interpretation and validity of its proposals to be universal and reach all readers;
– Literature seeks to deconstruct by nature, even if it is not critical, and therefore tends to be naively radical.
2) The nature of criminal law
– Reduction of legal complexity by concentrating on the major problems of life and human existence;
– Objective and impartial criteria;
– Need for social acceptability to fulfill their functions.
3) Why is literature relevant for criminal law?
a) Comparison and differentiation:
– Example: guilt explains or even causes the crime and not the opposite;
– Broadening of perspectives (new perspectives on motives, emotions, the meaning of behavior (e.g.: Dostoievsky – Crime and Punishment: Raskolnikov does not see his behavior as a crime, but as an affirmation of his existence, of his power)
b) Interference in the modeling of legal criteria
Example: In Gran Torino, a film by Clint Eastwood, the protagonist pretends to shoot so that they can shoot him and get caught.
Do the legal criteria define the situation as self-defense well or does self-defense have to be designed in a more complex way, considering the social context?
c) Valuation modeling
Example: Caucasian Chalk Circle
Brecht shows that children belong to those who love them – new values – relativizing biological ties