Detecting the Social : Order and Disorder in Post-1970s Detective Fiction
Detecting the Social : Order and Disorder in Post-1970s Detective Fiction
Click to enlarge
Author(s): Evans, Mary
ISBN No.: 9783319945194
Pages: vii, 196
Year: 201809
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 40.40
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"A joy to come across this brilliant examination of why contemporary crime fiction has become such a powerful, pertinent and unsettling cultural form. While many conventional literary critics remain baffled - or alarmed - by the genre's popularity, Evans, Moore and Johnstone reveal how crime fiction increasingly places itself in the space between the real and the fictional, engaging with our sense of collective unease at the shifting power relationships of our era." (William Shaw, Journalist and Author, UK) "This fascinating study reveals the numerous ways in which contemporary detective fiction is both a reflection and an analysis of the relationship between the individual and society in 21st century capitalism. Material insecurity, corrupt institutions, new technology, big data, new forms of the self all play a part in post 1970s novels. Read this insightful book and you will never again dismiss Scandi noir and its UK equivalent as merely genre fiction." (Linda McDowell, Professor Emerita of Human Geography, University of Oxford, UK) "Detecting the Social: Order and Disorder in Post-1970s Detective Fiction offers a beguiling and significant proposition: that detective fiction is a form of quiet radical social intervention. Focusing on post-1970s Anglophone detective fiction, this valuable book reveals how the genre of detective fiction - often categorized as socially and politically conservative - interrogates cultural norms of social order, moral virtue, and narrative certainty. Evans, Moore and Johnstone reveal that, in detective fiction, nothing is certain, and nothing is forever.


The implications of this reach far beyond the parameters of the genre itself: this book makes an imperative contribution to detective fiction studies, but also to how critics have thought, and continue to think, about genre more generally - and how we think about ourselves. Murder is here revealed to be, indeed, a fine art." (Stacy Gillis, Lecturer in Modern and Contemporary Literature, Newcastle University, UK).


To be able to view the table of contents for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
To be able to view the full description for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...