Sleuthing Ethnicity: The Detective in Multiethnic Crime FictionDorothea Fischer-Hornung, Monika Mueller Fairleigh Dickinson Univ 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As many contributors indicate, in ethnic detective fiction the importance of the detective's community of origin often superseded the traditional loneliness of the detective.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. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 67 筆
第 12 頁
... genre modifications effected by the subgenre . In ethnic detective fiction the importance of the detective's com- munity of origin often supersedes the traditional loneliness of the detec- tive . Sometimes the " ethnic plot ...
... genre modifications effected by the subgenre . In ethnic detective fiction the importance of the detective's com- munity of origin often supersedes the traditional loneliness of the detec- tive . Sometimes the " ethnic plot ...
第 14 頁
... genres . By supplying an insider's perspective on their neigh- borhoods , they challenge dominant representations of Little Italics and Harlem as dangerous , atavistic , and exotic . The three writers , moreover , accomplish this ...
... genres . By supplying an insider's perspective on their neigh- borhoods , they challenge dominant representations of Little Italics and Harlem as dangerous , atavistic , and exotic . The three writers , moreover , accomplish this ...
第 15 頁
... genre of detective fiction to subvert the underlying value system of the dominant cultural ethos in the United States . She fo- cuses on the portrayal of different belief systems , particularly that of folk beliefs and so - called ...
... genre of detective fiction to subvert the underlying value system of the dominant cultural ethos in the United States . She fo- cuses on the portrayal of different belief systems , particularly that of folk beliefs and so - called ...
第 17 頁
... genre can be a device for discussing cross - cultural themes as well as for explor- ing gender and ethnicity . According to Esther Fritsch and Marion Gymnich , Native American au- thors Louis Owens and Sherman Alexie make extensive use ...
... genre can be a device for discussing cross - cultural themes as well as for explor- ing gender and ethnicity . According to Esther Fritsch and Marion Gymnich , Native American au- thors Louis Owens and Sherman Alexie make extensive use ...
第 18 頁
... genre of detective fiction . Popular crime fiction provides entertainment for a wide reading audience and transmits cultural discourses . In the United States , for example , the market for the genre of ethnic detective fiction has ...
... genre of detective fiction . Popular crime fiction provides entertainment for a wide reading audience and transmits cultural discourses . In the United States , for example , the market for the genre of ethnic detective fiction has ...
內容
23 | |
36 | |
53 | |
Rudolfo Anayas Mystery Trilogy | 81 |
Comparing Ethnic Identities | 95 |
Subverting the Dominant US Cultural Ethos | 97 |
The Female Detective in the Novels of Carolina GarciaAguilera and Barbara Neely | 114 |
Empowering Spaces in Valerie Wilson Wesleys Detective Fiction | 133 |
The Significance of Dreams and Ghosts in Three Contemporary Native American Crime Novels | 204 |
Globalizing Ethnicity | 225 |
Val McDermids Lindsay Gordon Mysteries | 227 |
The HardBoiled Pattern as Discursive Practice of Ethnic Subalternity in Jakob Arjounis Happy Birthday Turk and Irene Disches Ein Job | 240 |
Frenchness and Arab Alterity in JeanChristophe Grangés BloodRed Rivers | 260 |
Sally Morgans My Place as Australian Indigenous Detective Narrative | 280 |
An Interview with Barbara Neely | 299 |
An Interview with Valerie Wilson Wesley | 308 |
Sleuthing Identity in Two Juvenile Ethnic Detective Novels | 148 |
Shaft 2000 | 164 |
The Private Eye I in the Detective Fiction of Walter Mosley and Tony Hillerman | 175 |
Aimee and David Thurlos Ella Clah Novels | 187 |
DOROTHEA FISCHERHORNUNG and MONIKA MUELLER | 320 |
Contributors | 323 |
Index | 327 |
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常見字詞
Abdouf Aboriginal Adrienne Johnson African American Alan American detective fiction Barbara Neely becomes beliefs Birkle Blanche White character Chee Chicano crime fiction Cuban cultural detective fiction detective novels detective's doppelgänger dreams ethnic detective fiction feels female feminist film gender genre ghosts Goldberg Gordon Gosselin Grangé hard-boiled detective Harlem Holocaust identity Imamu Indian Killer indigenous investigator Jewish Jews Jim Chee Judaism Kellerman Kemal Kemelman killed lesbian literature live Lupe Morgan's Mosley mother multicultural murder mystery narrative Native American Navajo Newark Niémans Peter plot police political Press protagonist Rabbi race racial reader Rina Rudolfo Anaya sexual Shaft sleuth social society Soitos solve Sonny spiritual Stacy Tamara Tanaka thing Thurlo and Thurlo tion tive Tony Hillerman traditional University Valerie Wilson Wesley violence Walter Mosley Walter Mosley's woman women writing York Zia Summer
熱門章節
第 242 頁 - A task that consists of not - of no longer - treating discourses as groups of signs (signifying elements referring to contents or representations) but as practices that systematically form the objects of which they speak.
第 251 頁 - Strangely, the foreigner lives within us: he is the hidden face of our identity, the space that wrecks our abode, the time in which understanding and affinity founder. By recognizing him within ourselves, we are spared detesting him in himself. A symptom that precisely turns "we...
第 130 頁 - Womanliness therefore could be assumed and worn as a mask, both to hide the possession of masculinity and to avert the reprisals expected if she was found to possess it...
第 130 頁 - The reader may now ask how I define womanliness or where I draw the line between genuine womanliness and the 'masquerade'. My suggestion is not, however, that there is any such difference; whether radical or superficial, they are the same thing.
第 54 頁 - Pratt defines contact zones as "social spaces where cultures meet, clash, and grapple with each other, often in contexts of highly asymmetrical relations of power...
第 135 頁 - But down these mean streets a man must go who is not himself mean, who is neither tarnished nor afraid.
第 151 頁 - beyond' is neither a new horizon, nor a leaving behind of the past. . . . Beginnings and endings may be the sustaining myths of the middle years; but in the fin de siecle, we find ourselves in the moment of transit where space and time cross to produce complex figures of difference and identity, past and present, inside and outside, inclusion and exclusion.
第 185 頁 - ... selves', which people with a shared history and ancestry hold in common.