Les Diaboliques: Justice Manifested Via the Uncanny
The theme of justice is indeed ambiguous in the short stores Les Diaboliques by Jules Barbey D'Aurevilly. The stories are indeed graphically vivid, which take an unflinching perspective on life, love, sex, honor, lust, beauty and power—mostly from a masculine point of view. It is this masculine perspective which can shackle and disarm the female characters of these stories. But in each story, justice prevails on the fictional reality by allowing the females to consistently have an uncanny sense of beauty or cunning—a beauty that prevails by giving each female a bewitching or animalistic quality which endures and ends up haunting the male protagonists or disarming other female characters of the narratives. In this sense justice has fallen: while the female protagonists often don't have the same amount of freedom or power that the male characters do, they have a strong hold on the uncanny and the bewitching and their beauty continues to haunt and bewitch time after time, regardless of whether they're physically there or not
Appellate Opinion in the Case
This case study examines a decision from the Court of Federal Claims in order to see what it reveals about contract law in general and federal contracts in particular. In the case of Union Pacific v. the United States, the judge ultimately ruled that the statute of limitations for bringing a claim had passed. However, because that time limit passed as a result of confusion among the lower courts, the ruling helps to demonstrate the problems that permeate contract in general.