Read more
Zusatztext "Having long ago outgrown the confines of the English country house murder mystery, the detective has travelled widely, adapting himself to other cultures and genres. Contemporary critics have become increasingly fascinated by this versatility and by the diversity of detection itself. The nine excellent essays in Detecting Detection astutely consider the reasons for the detection plot's persistence and proliferation, exploring in detail the ways in which it has been transformed across cultures and incorporated in a variety of other narrative forms. They illuminate its ability to raise difficult questions about moral and ethical choices, guilt, political repression, personal and national trauma, witnessing, judgment and belief - and about 'the elements of the global mystery of the functioning of the world and society'." -- Lee Horsley, Reader in Literature and Culture, Lancaster University, UK Informationen zum Autor Peter Baker is Professor of English and Cultural Studies at Towson University, Baltimore, USA. He is the author of three books, including Deconstruction and the Ethical Turn (University Press of Florida, 1995). He has also edited three volumes, including Onward: Contemporary Poetry and Poetics (Peter Lang, 1996). With co-editors Rod Smith and Kaplan Harris, he is completing an edition of The Selected Letters of Robert Creeley , forthcoming in Fall 2011 with the University of California Press. Deborah Shaller is Professor in the English Department at Towson University, Baltimore, USA. She directs the university's writing tutorial service, and lectures on popular literature, writing, and educational theory. Klappentext Examines how modern fiction writers use the detective plot to enrich and complicate their narratives. Vorwort Examines how modern fiction writers use the detective plot to enrich and complicate their narratives. Zusammenfassung We indulge our fascination with detection in many ways, only some of which occur in the detective story. In fact, modern fiction regularly uses elements of a detective narrative to tell another story altogether, to engage characters, narrators, and readers with questions of identity, with examinations of moral and ethical reasoning, with critiques of social and political injustices, and with the metaphysics of meaning itself. Detective plots cross cultural and national boundaries and occur in different ways and different genres. Taken together, they suggest important contemporary understandings of who and what we are, how and what we aspire to become. Detecting Detection gathers writing from the UK, North and South America, Europe, and Asia to draw together instances of the detective plot in contemporary fiction. It is unique not only in addressing the theme—a recurring one in modern literature—but in tracking the interest in detectives and detection across international borders. Inhaltsverzeichnis Contributors Editors' Introduction 1. The Detection Plot as a Means of Testimony in Ann-Marie MacDonald's The Way the Crow Flies Heta Pyrhönen 2. Is The Savage Detectives A Detective Story? Peter Baker 3. Detectivism as a Means of Resistance in Juan Marse's El embrujo de Shanghai Anna-Maria Medina 4. Two Men Walk into a Bar Michelle Robinson 5. Espionage and the War on Secrecy and Terror in Graham Greene and Beyond Sofia Ahlberg 6. The Stories We All Tell: The Function of Language and Knowledge in Julia Kristeva's Novel Possessions Rossitsa Terzieva-Artemis 7. Zen Keytsch: Mystery Handymen with Dragon Tattoos Sheng-Ma...