Sleuthing Ethnicity: The Detective in Multiethnic Crime FictionDorothea Fischer-Hornung, Monika Mueller, Fairleigh Dickinson University Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2003 - 331 頁 Sleuthing Ethnicity: The Detective in Multiethnic Crime Fiction reflects the fact that ethnic detective novels have by now become an accepted subgenre of detective fiction. This volume focuses on the characteristics of ethnic detective fiction and the important genre modifications effected by the subgenre. As many contributors indicate, in ethnic detective fiction the importance of the detective's community of origin often superseded the traditional loneliness of the detective. Moreover, ethnic crime fiction addresses issues of personal and social identity that point out the importance of the ethnic community for the individual detective. The essays collected in this volume confront these established issues of ethnic detective fiction but also move beyond them by focusing on wider topics: the intersection of ethnicity and gender; marketing strategies for ethnic mysteries; juvenile ethnic detective literature; changing sexual politics; and historical issues of ethnic crime. The additional focus of this collection of essays on recent international detective fiction outside the United States redirects attention to questions of authenticity, authority, and stereotyping. |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 37 筆
第 258 頁
Rather , language is the unfolding of meaning itself , including the meaning of
human experience . We do not speak language ; rather , language speaks us ” (
1997 , xii ) . 5 . Yilmaz despised Ahmed because Yilmaz ' s father , Vasif , always
...
Rather , language is the unfolding of meaning itself , including the meaning of
human experience . We do not speak language ; rather , language speaks us ” (
1997 , xii ) . 5 . Yilmaz despised Ahmed because Yilmaz ' s father , Vasif , always
...
第 291 頁
Language is a crucial facet of her undertaking , as is indicated by the narrator ' s
repeated allusions to indigenous languages that remain inaccessible to her as a
nontribal Aborigine ( see Morgan 1987 , 30 , 47 , 148 – 49 ) , which in turn is an ...
Language is a crucial facet of her undertaking , as is indicated by the narrator ' s
repeated allusions to indigenous languages that remain inaccessible to her as a
nontribal Aborigine ( see Morgan 1987 , 30 , 47 , 148 – 49 ) , which in turn is an ...
第 321 頁
This unified dominant language , however , has often been unavailable to first -
generation immigrants and migrants — a fact that is exemplified in this volume by
the discussion of early U . S . - Italian crime fiction , where the move from ...
This unified dominant language , however , has often been unavailable to first -
generation immigrants and migrants — a fact that is exemplified in this volume by
the discussion of early U . S . - Italian crime fiction , where the move from ...
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