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This volume investigates the relationship between the conventions of noir fiction and film and its sub-types in relation to environmental crises.
List of contents
Introduction to
The Ecology of American Noir 0.1 What is
The Ecology of American Noir?
0.2 Defining American Noir
0.3 Defining Eco-Noir
0.4 Detailed Overview of the Chapters
Chapter 1: The Hardboiled Eco-Awareness of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler
1.1 Introduction: The Fragmented Ecologies of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler
1.2 Hammett and Chandler's Fragmented Scales
1.3
Red Harvest (1929)
1.4 From Personville to Poisonville
1.5
The Big Sleep (1939)
1.6 Conclusion
Chapter 2: Exploitation and Extraction in Chinatown and The Two Jakes
2.1 From Noir to Neo-Noir
2.2
Chinatown and
The Two Jakes 2.3 Resource Extraction in the Films
2.4 Neo-Noir Perception
2.5 Incest
2.6 Race
2.7 Looking Ahead: What
The Two Jakes Tells us About The Future
2.8 Conclusion
Chapter 3: Rhizomatic Eco-Noir Visions of
New York 2140 and
Hummingbird Salamander 3.1"What is Happening?" and "What Happened?"
3.2 Methodology
3.3 The New Nordic Noir
3.4
New York 2140 3.5 The Collective PI and the Rhizomatic Map of New York City
3.6 Regenerating Crime and Violence
3.7 The Scene of the Seen Victim
3.8
Hummingbird Salamander: The Rhizome and the "Weird"
3.9 The Hardboiled and Weird Female Green PI
3.10 The Eco-Crime Scene and Olfactory Sensations
3.11 Conclusion
Chapter 4: Afterword
4.1 Introduction: Eco-Noir
Han 4.2 Introduction to The Silent Sea and Eco-Noir
Han 4.3 Collective Detectiveships, Lunar Water, and Luna
4.4 Conclusion
About the author
Katrina Younes is an Assistant Professor (Limited Duties) at Western University's Department of Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies.
Summary
This volume investigates the relationship between the conventions of noir fiction and film and its sub-types in relation to environmental crises.