Deviance in Contemporary Crime Fiction

Deviance in Contemporary Crime Fiction

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  • Author: C. Gregoriou
  • Publisher: Springer
  • ISBN: 0230207219
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 178

This book explores the three aspects of deviance that contemporary crime fiction manipulates: linguistic, social, and generic. Gregoriou conducts case studies into crime series by James Patterson, Michael Connelly and Patricia Cornwell, and investigates the way in which these novelists correspondingly challenge those aforementioned conventions.


Crime in Literature

Crime in Literature

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  • Author: Vincenzo Ruggiero
  • Publisher: Verso
  • ISBN: 9781859844823
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 276

Vincent Ruggiero's wide ranging study takes in several authors, including Victor Hugo, Camus, Cervantes and Emile Zola, and addresses themes such as organized crime, the links between crime and drugs, political and administrative corruption, concepts of deviancy and the criminal justice process.


The Poetics of Deviance in Contemporary American Crime Fiction

The Poetics of Deviance in Contemporary American Crime Fiction

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  • Author: Christiana Gregoriou
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN:
  • Category :
  • Languages : en
  • Pages :


Tatort Germany

Tatort Germany

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  • Author: Lynn M. Kutch
  • Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
  • ISBN: 1571135715
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 273

New essays by leading scholars examining today's vibrant and innovative German crime fiction, along with its historical background.


Globalization and the State in Contemporary Crime Fiction

Globalization and the State in Contemporary Crime Fiction

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  • Author: Andrew Pepper
  • Publisher: Springer
  • ISBN: 1137425733
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 247

Why has crime fiction become a global genre? How do writers use crime fiction to reflect upon the changing nature of crime and policing in our contemporary world? This book argues that the globalization of crime fiction should not be celebrated uncritically. Instead, it looks at the new forms and techniques writers are using to examine the crimes and policing practices that define a rapidly changing world. In doing so, this collection of essays examines how the relationship between global crime, capitalism, and policing produces new configurations of violence in crime fiction – and asks whether the genre can find ways of analyzing and even opposing such violence as part of its necessarily limited search for justice both within and beyond the state.


Language, Ideology and Identity in Serial Killer Narratives

Language, Ideology and Identity in Serial Killer Narratives

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  • Author: Christiana Gregoriou
  • Publisher: Routledge
  • ISBN: 1136837841
  • Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 209

In this book, Gregoriou explores the portrayal of the serial killer identity and its related ideology across a range of contemporary crime narratives, including detective fiction, the true crime genre and media journalism. How exactly is the serial killer consciousness portrayed, how is the killing linguistically justified, and how distinguishing is the language revolving around criminal ideology and identity across these narrative genres? By employing linguistic and content-related methods of analysis, her study aims to work toward the development of a stylistic framework on the representation of serial killer ideology across factual (i.e. media texts), factional (i.e. true crime books) and fictional (i.e. novels) murder narratives. ‘Schema’ is a term commonly used to refer to organised bundles of knowledge in our brains, which are activated once we come across situations we have previously experienced, a ‘group schema’ being one such inventory shared by many. By analysing serial murder narratives across various genres, Gregoriou uncovers a widely shared ‘group schema’ for these murderers, and questions the extent to which real criminal minds are in fact linguistically fictionalised. Gregoriou’s study of the mental functioning and representation of criminal personas can help illuminate our schematic understanding of actual criminal minds.


Apprehending the Criminal

Apprehending the Criminal

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  • Author: Marie-Christine Leps
  • Publisher: Duke University Press
  • ISBN: 9780822312710
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 284

In this wide-ranging analysis, Marie-Christine Leps traces the production and circulation of knowledge about the criminal in nineteenth-century discourse, and shows how the delineation of deviance served to construct cultural norms. She demonstrates how the apprehension of crime and criminals was an important factor in the establishment of such key institutions as national systems of education, a cheap daily press, and various welfare measures designed to fight the spread of criminality. Leps focuses on three discursive practices: the emergence of criminology, the development of a mass-produced press, and the proliferation of crime fiction, in both England and France. Beginning where Foucault's work Discipline and Punish ends, Leps analyzes intertextual modes of knowledge production and shows how the elaboration of hegemonic truths about the criminal is related to the exercise of power. The scope of her investigation includes scientific treatises such as Criminal Man by Cesare Lombroso and The English Convict by Charles Goring, reports on the Jack the Ripper murders in The Times and Le Petit Parisien, the Sherlock Holmes stories, Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and novels by Zola and Bourget.


The Crime Novel

The Crime Novel

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  • Author: Anthony Channell Hilfer
  • Publisher: Austin : University of Texas Press
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Crime in literature
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 208

In contrast to the detective story, where a sympathetic figure uses reason and intuition to solve the puzzle and restore order and moral authority, in the crime novel the victim, a guilty bystander, or someone falsely accused, and the crime may never be satisfactorily resolved. Hilfer (English, U. of Texas) defines and explores the genre and most of its major writers. Paper edition (71136-0), $13.95. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR


Constructing Crime

Constructing Crime

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  • Author: C. Gregoriou
  • Publisher: Springer
  • ISBN: 0230392083
  • Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 249

Crime and criminals are a pervasive theme in all areas of our culture, including media, journalism, film and literature. This book explores how crime is constructed and culturally represented through a range of areas including Spanish, English Language and Literature, Music, Criminology, Gender, Law, Cultural and Criminal Justice Studies.


Retold Resold Transformed

Retold Resold Transformed

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  • Author: Christiana Gregoriou
  • Publisher: Mimesis
  • ISBN: 8869772462
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 245

In recent decades crime fiction has enjoyed a creative boom. Although, as Alison Young argues in her book Imagining Crime (1996), crime stories remain strongly identified with specific locations, the genre has acquired a global reach, illuminating different corners of the world for the delectation of international audiences. The recent fashion for Nordic noir has highlighted the process by which the crime story may be franchised, as it is transposed from one culture to another. Crime fiction has thus become a vehicle for cultural exchange in the broadest of senses; not only does it move with apparent ease from one country to the next, and in and out of different languages, but it is also reproduced through various cultural media. What is involved in these processes of transference? Do stories lose or gain value? Or are they transformed into something else altogether? How does the crime story that originates in a specific society or culture come to articulate aspects of very different societies and cultures? And what are the repercussions of this cultural permeability?