Detective FictionISBN: 978-0-7456-2941-4
Hardcover
280 pages
September 2005, Polity
Other Available Formats: Paperback
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The book focuses particularly on the relationship of detective
fiction's emerging ‘puzzle-element’ to the
investigative methods of the nascent historical sciences, and to
popular cultural attitudes toward history, particularly in Great
Britain and the United States. In addition, the author examines the
specific impact of urbanization, the rise of the professions, brain
science, legal and social reform, war and economic dislocation,
class-consciousness, and changing concepts of race and gender.
Extended close readings of the classics of Detective Fiction in
several ‘Casebook’ essays devoted to seminal works by
Poe, Doyle, Sayers, and Chandler show in detail how the genre has
responded to these influences over the last century and a half.
They also serve to introduce students to a variety of current
critical approaches.
Undergraduate students of Detective and Crime Fiction and of
genre fiction in general, will find this book essential
reading.
‘Cool, savvy, and utterly compelling: every page of
Charles J. Rzepka’s magnificent history of detective fiction
displays the forensic panache of the true connoisseur of murder.
Commanding an unrivalled breadth of reference and depth of insight,
the book is a must-read for everyone interested in detective
fiction.’
Nicholas Roe, University of St Andrews
‘In this sustained analysis of the emergence and
development of detective fiction in England and America, Charles
Rzepka has produced both a compelling cultural history and a
skilful demonstration of what Poe aptly called “the moral
activity which disentangles”. It will become an indispensable
guide to serious students of detective literature.’
Ronald R. Thomas, University of Puget Sound