ABSTRACT

Crime Fiction provides a lively introduction to what is both a wide-ranging and hugely popular literary genre. Using examples from a variety of novels, short stories, films and televisions series, John Scaggs:

  • presents a concise history of crime fiction - from biblical narratives to James Ellroy - broadening the genre to include revenge tragedy and the gothic novel
  • explores the key sub-genres of crime fiction, such as 'Rational Criminal Investigation', The Hard-Boiled Mode', 'The Police Procedural' and 'Historical Crime Fiction'
  • locates texts and their recurring themes and motifs in a wider social and historical context
  • outlines the various critical concepts that are central to the study of crime fiction, including gender, narrative theory and film theory
  • considers contemporary television series like C.S.I.: Crime Scene Investigation alongside the 'classic' whodunnits of Agatha Christie.

Accessible and clear, this comprehensive overview is the essential guide for all those studying crime fiction and concludes with a look at future directions for the genre in the twentieth-first century.

chapter |6 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 1|26 pages

A CHRONOLOGY OF CRIME

chapter 2|22 pages

MYSTERY AND DETECTIVE FICTION

chapter 3|30 pages

THE HARD-BOILED MODE

chapter 4|20 pages

THE POLICE PROCEDURAL

chapter 5|17 pages

THE CRIME THRILLER

chapter 6|22 pages

HISTORICAL CRIME FICTION

chapter |5 pages

OSSARY

chapter |2 pages

GGESTIONSFOR RTHER ADING

chapter |15 pages

LECT BI BLIOGRAPHY

chapter |5 pages

DEX