ABSTRACT

Exploring how Margaret Atwood’s fiction reimagines the figure of the detective and the nature of crime, Jackie Shead shows how the author radically reworks the crime fiction genre. Shead focuses on Surfacing, Bodily Harm, Alias Grace, The Blind Assassin, Oryx and Crake and selected short fiction, showing the ways in which Atwood’s protagonists are confronted by their own collusion in hegemonic assumptions and thus are motivated to investigate and expose crimes of gender, class and colonialism. Shead begins with a discussion of how Atwood’s treatment of crime fiction’s generic elements, particularly those of the whodunit, clue puzzle and spy thriller, departs from convention. Through discussion of Atwood’s metafictive strategies, Shead also examines Atwood’s techniques for activating her readers as investigators who are offered an educative process parallel to that experienced by some of the author’s protagonists. This book also marks a significant intervention in an ongoing debate among Atwood critics that pits the author’s postmodernism against her ethical and humanistic concerns.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |26 pages

Surfacing

The Detective Murder Mystery

chapter |22 pages

Bodily Harm

The Game of Clue and the Spy Thriller

chapter |24 pages

Alias Grace

The Cold Case and the Doomed Detective

chapter |24 pages

The Blind Assassin

Conspiracy and Confession

chapter |22 pages

Payback and Selected Fiction

Reckoning, Redress, Retribution

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion