Female Corpses in Crime Fiction

Female Corpses in Crime Fiction
Author: Glen S. Close
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2018-10-10
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9783319990132

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This book examines the central significance of sexualized female corpses in modern and contemporary Hispanic and Anglophone crime fiction. Beginning with the foundational detective fictions of the nineteenth century, it draws from diverse subgenres to describe a transatlantic tradition of necropornography characterized by lascivious interest in female cadavers, dissection, morgues, femicide, and snuff movies. Hard-boiled and police procedural classics from the U.S. and the U.K. are juxtaposed with texts by established Spanish and Spanish American genre masters and with obscure works that prefigure the contemporary transmedial boom in corpse-centered fictions. The rhetoric and aesthetics of necropornographic crime fiction are related to those of popular crime journalism and forensic-science television dramas. This study argues that crime fiction has long fixated disproportionately on the corpses of beautiful young white women and continues to treat their deaths and autopsies as occasions for male visual pleasure, male subjective self-affirmation and male homosocial bonding.

The Lady in the Morgue

The Lady in the Morgue
Author: Jonathan Latimer
Publsiher: Pocket Books of Canada
Total Pages: 296
Release: 1936
Genre: Murder
ISBN: LCCN:36018157

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The Routledge Companion to Crime Fiction

The Routledge Companion to Crime Fiction
Author: Janice Allan,Jesper Gulddal,Stewart King,Andrew Pepper
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 859
Release: 2020-04-07
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780429842429

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The Routledge Companion to Crime Fiction is a comprehensive introduction to crime fiction and crime fiction scholarship today. Across 45 original chapters, specialists in the field offer innovative approaches to the classics of the genre as well as ground-breaking mappings of emerging themes and trends. The volume is divided into three parts. Part I, Approaches, rearticulates the key theoretical questions posed by the crime genre. Part II, Devices, examines the textual characteristics of crime fiction. Part III, Interfaces investigates the complex ways in which crime fiction engages with the defining issues of its context – from policing and forensic science through war, migration and narcotics to digital media and the environment. Rigorously argued and engagingly written, the volume is indispensable both to students and scholars of crime fiction.

Animals in Detective Fiction

Animals in Detective Fiction
Author: Ruth Hawthorn,John Miller
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 311
Release: 2022-12-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783031092411

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This book explores the vast array of animals that populate detective fiction. If the genre begins, as is widely supposed, with Edgar Allan Poe’s “Murders in the Rue Morgue” (1841), then detective fiction’s very first culprit is an animal. Animals, moreover, consistently appear as victims, clues, and companions, while the abstract conception of animality is closely tied to the idea of criminality. Although it is often described as an essentially conservative form, detective fiction can unsettle the binary of human and animal to intersect with developing concerns in animal studies: animal agency, the ethical complexities of human/animal interaction, the politics and literary aesthetics of violence, and animal metaphor. Gathering its 14 essays into sections on ontologies, ethics, politics, and forms, Animals in Detective Fiction provides a compelling and nuanced analysis of the central role creatures play in this enduringly popular and continually morphing literary form.

Women and Crime in Post Transitional South African Crime Fiction

Women and Crime in Post Transitional South African Crime Fiction
Author: Sabine Binder
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2020-11-16
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9789004437449

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In this ground-breaking study, Sabine Binder analyses the complex ways in which female crime fictional victims, detectives and perpetrators in South African crime fiction resonate with widespread and persistent real crimes against women in post-apartheid South Africa. Drawing on a wide range of crime novels written over the last decade, Binder emphasises the genre’s feminist potential and critically maps its political work at the intersection of gender and race. Her study challenges the perception of crime fiction as a trivial genre and shows how, in South Africa at least, it provides a vibrant platform for social, cultural and ethical debates, exposing violence, misogyny and racism and shedding light on the problematics of law and justice for women faced with crime.

The Cambridge Companion to World Crime Fiction

The Cambridge Companion to World Crime Fiction
Author: Stewart King,Jesper Gulddal,Alistair Rolls
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2022-04-21
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781108484596

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The first systematic account of crime fiction as a global genre, offering unprecedented coverage of distinct traditions across the world.

Transnational Crime Fiction

Transnational Crime Fiction
Author: Maarit Piipponen,Helen Mäntymäki,Marinella Rodi-Risberg
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2020-10-27
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783030534134

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Focusing on contemporary crime narratives from different parts of the world, this collection of essays explores the mobility of crimes, criminals and investigators across social, cultural and national borders. The essays argue that such border crossings reflect on recent sociocultural transformations and geopolitical anxieties to create an image of networked and interconnected societies where crime is not easily contained. The book further analyses crime texts’ wider sociocultural and affective significance by examining the global mobility of the genre itself across cultures, languages and media. Underlining the global reach and mobility of the crime genre, the collection analyses types and representations of mobility in literary and visual crime narratives, inviting comparisons between texts, crimes and mobilities in a geographically diverse context. The collection ultimately understands mobility as an object of study and a critical lens through which transformations in our globalised world can be examined.

The Penguin Book of Victorian Women in Crime

The Penguin Book of Victorian Women in Crime
Author: Michael Sims
Publsiher: Penguin
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2011-01-25
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781101486177

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A wonderfully wicked new anthology from the editor of The Penguin Book of Gaslight Crime It is the Victorian era and society is both entranced by and fearful of that suspicious character known as the New Woman. She rides those new- fangled bicycles and doesn't like to be told what to do. And, in crime fiction, such female detectives as Loveday Brooke, Dorcas Dene, and Lady Molly of Scotland Yard are out there shadowing suspects, crawling through secret passages, fingerprinting corpses, and sometimes committing a lesser crime in order to solve a murder. In The Penguin Book of Victorian Women in Crime, Michael Sims has brought together all of the era's great crime-fighting females- plus a few choice crooks, including Four Square Jane and the Sorceress of the Strand.