|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
The Routledge Companion to Crime Fiction is a comprehensive
introduction to crime fiction and crime fiction scholarship today.
Across forty-five 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 the genre. 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. Engagingly written and
drawing on examples from around the world, this volume is
indispensable to both students and scholars of crime fiction.
Criminal Moves: Modes of Mobility in Crime Fiction offers a major
intervention into contemporary theoretical debates about crime
fiction. It seeks to overturn the following preconceptions: that
the genre does not warrant critical analysis, that genre norms and
conventions matter more than textual individuality, and that
comparative perspectives are secondary to the study of the
British-American canon. Criminal Moves challenges the distinction
between literary and popular fiction and proposes that crime
fiction be seen as constantly violating its own boundaries. Centred
on three axes of mobility, the essays ask how can we imagine a
mobile reading practice that realizes the genre's full textual
complexity, without being limited by the authoritative
self-interpretations provided by crime narratives; how we can
overcome restrictive notions of 'genre', 'formula' or 'popular';
and how we can establish transnational perspectives that challenge
the centrality of the British-American tradition and recognize that
the global history of crime fiction is characterized, not by the
existence of parallel national traditions, but rather by processes
of appropriation and transculturation. Criminal Moves presents a
comprehensive reinterpretation of the history of the genre that
also has profound ramifications for how we read individual crime
fiction texts.
Accessible yet comprehensive, this first systematic account of
crime fiction across the globe offers a deep and thoroughly nuanced
understanding of the genre's transnational history. Offering a
lucid account of the major theoretical issues and comparative
perspectives that constitute world crime fiction, this book
introduces readers to the international crime fiction publishing
industry, the translation and circulation of crime fiction,
international crime fiction collections, the role of women in world
crime fiction, and regional forms of crime fiction. It also
illuminates the past and present of crime fiction in various
supranational regions across the world, including East and South
Asia, the Arab World, Sub-Saharan Africa, Europe and Scandinavia,
as well as three spheres defined by a shared language, namely the
Francophone, Lusophone, and Hispanic worlds. Thoroughly-researched
and broad in scope, this book is as valuable for general readers as
for undergraduate and postgraduate students of popular fiction and
world literature.
Accessible yet comprehensive, this first systematic account of
crime fiction across the globe offers a deep and thoroughly nuanced
understanding of the genre's transnational history. Offering a
lucid account of the major theoretical issues and comparative
perspectives that constitute world crime fiction, this book
introduces readers to the international crime fiction publishing
industry, the translation and circulation of crime fiction,
international crime fiction collections, the role of women in world
crime fiction, and regional forms of crime fiction. It also
illuminates the past and present of crime fiction in various
supranational regions across the world, including East and South
Asia, the Arab World, Sub-Saharan Africa, Europe and Scandinavia,
as well as three spheres defined by a shared language, namely the
Francophone, Lusophone, and Hispanic worlds. Thoroughly-researched
and broad in scope, this book is as valuable for general readers as
for undergraduate and postgraduate students of popular fiction and
world literature.
Criminal Moves: Modes of Mobility in Crime Fiction offers a major
intervention into contemporary theoretical debates about crime
fiction. It seeks to overturn the following preconceptions: that
the genre does not warrant critical analysis, that genre norms and
conventions matter more than textual individuality, and that
comparative perspectives are secondary to the study of the
British-American canon. Criminal Moves challenges the distinction
between literary and popular fiction and proposes that crime
fiction be seen as constantly violating its own boundaries. Centred
on three axes of mobility, the essays ask how can we imagine a
mobile reading practice that realizes the genre's full textual
complexity, without being limited by the authoritative
self-interpretations provided by crime narratives; how we can
overcome restrictive notions of 'genre', 'formula' or 'popular';
and how we can establish transnational perspectives that challenge
the centrality of the British-American tradition and recognize that
the global history of crime fiction is characterized, not by the
existence of parallel national traditions, but rather by processes
of appropriation and transculturation. Criminal Moves presents a
comprehensive reinterpretation of the history of the genre that
also has profound ramifications for how we read individual crime
fiction texts.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|