ABSTRACT

This collection establishes new perspectives on the idea of mystery, as it is enacted and encoded in the genre of detective fiction. Essays reclaim detective fiction as an object of critical inquiry, examining the ways it shapes issues of social destabilization, moral ambiguity, reader complicity, intertextuality, and metafiction. Breaking new ground by moving beyond the critical preoccupation with classification of historical types and generic determinants, contributors examine the effect of mystery on literary forms and on readers, who experience the provocative, complex process of coming to grips with the unknown and the unknowable. This volume opens up discussion on publically acclaimed, modern works of mystery and on classic pieces, addressing a variety of forms including novels, plays, graphic novels, television series, films, and ipad games. Re-examining the interpretive potential of a genre that seems easily defined yet has endless permutations, the book closely analyzes the cultural function of mystery, the way it intervenes in social and political problems, as well as the literary properties that give the genre its particular shape. The volume treats various texts as meaningful subjects for critical analysis and sheds new light on the interpretive potential for a genre that creates as much ambiguity as it does clarity. Scholars of mystery and detective fiction, crime fiction, genre studies, and cultural studies will find this volume invaluable.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Embarking on a New Investigation

part |59 pages

Disturbing Expectations

chapter |17 pages

Troubling Bodies of Evidence

Gender, Detection, and the Problems of Self-Reinvention in Raymond Chandler's The Lady in the Lake and Tim O'Brien's In the Lake of the Woods

chapter |20 pages

The Revelations of the Corpse

Interpreting the Body in the Golden Age Detective Novel

chapter |21 pages

Mapping the Mark

Tattoos, Crime Fiction, and Gendered Cartographies

part |65 pages

Implicating Readers

chapter |21 pages

The Transtextuality of James M. Cain's Snyder–Gray Novels

The Postman Always Rings Twice, Double Indemnity, and The Cocktail Waitress

chapter |17 pages

P. D. James's Discontinuous Narrative

A Suitable Job for a Reader

chapter |26 pages

Franz Kafka

Before the Fictional Process

part |47 pages

Indicting Cultures

chapter |16 pages

Cooking the Books

Metafictional Myth and Ecocritical Magic in “Cozy” Mysteries from Agatha Christie to Contemporary Cooking Sleuths

part |55 pages

Adapting Forms

chapter |20 pages

Agatha Christie's Mousetrap and Tom Stoppard's Real Inspector Hound

Playing Cat and Mouse with Farce, Mystery, and Meta-Theatricality

chapter |16 pages

Beyond the Fog

Inherent Vice and Thomas Pynchon's Noir Adjustment

chapter |18 pages

The Mystery of the Missing Formula

Adapting the World's Most Popular Girl Detective to Multimedia Platforms