Crime fiction and colonial literatures were both established as literary genres in the nineteenth century, and their interrelation has begun to attract the attention of critics working at the intersection between popular genres and the cultural forms produced by colonialism. In Crime and Empire (2003), for example Upamanyu Mukherjee explores the centrality of the language of law and order, policing, crime and punishment in establishing British authority in India. And, in her book Detecting the Nation (2004), Caroline Reitz emphasizes the inextricable bond between crime fiction and the Imperial cultural enterprise. Stories of chaos and restored order were central in colonial literatures as well as in the beginnings of the genre of crime fict...
This book opens up a range of important perspectives on law and violence by considering the ways in ...
Crime fiction, if you choose to classify it in its broadest sense, has a very long history. Detectiv...
This paper locates the postcolonial crime novel as a space for disenfranchised groups to write back ...
Crime fiction is currently one of the most globalized, most popular, and biggest-selling of commerci...
The issue of postcolonial crime imposes considerations connected to the tradition of a genre that ha...
This essay, and its preceding companion exercise, both explore the relationship between crime and cu...
This study offers a comprehensive overview of post-millennial Indian (English) and Latin American cr...
This thesis investigates the ways in which the crime novel genre has been taken up and adapted in or...
This essay and its sequel explore the relationship between crime and culture in order to better unde...
[Extract] This chapter argues for the importance of a postcolonial perspective in criminology. It is...
Davis, Emily S.Leitch, Thomas M.Scholarly and popular discussions of detective fiction, and crime fi...
This chapter considers the challenges and opportunities that a postcolonial practice might generate ...
none2Crime is common to all cultures but is simultaneously culturally specific: narratives of crime,...
Abstract: This article takes up the question of “crime writing” and rejoins the debate around whethe...
In addition to co-editing, Nels Pearson (with Marc Singer) co-authored, Open Cases: Detection, (Post...
This book opens up a range of important perspectives on law and violence by considering the ways in ...
Crime fiction, if you choose to classify it in its broadest sense, has a very long history. Detectiv...
This paper locates the postcolonial crime novel as a space for disenfranchised groups to write back ...
Crime fiction is currently one of the most globalized, most popular, and biggest-selling of commerci...
The issue of postcolonial crime imposes considerations connected to the tradition of a genre that ha...
This essay, and its preceding companion exercise, both explore the relationship between crime and cu...
This study offers a comprehensive overview of post-millennial Indian (English) and Latin American cr...
This thesis investigates the ways in which the crime novel genre has been taken up and adapted in or...
This essay and its sequel explore the relationship between crime and culture in order to better unde...
[Extract] This chapter argues for the importance of a postcolonial perspective in criminology. It is...
Davis, Emily S.Leitch, Thomas M.Scholarly and popular discussions of detective fiction, and crime fi...
This chapter considers the challenges and opportunities that a postcolonial practice might generate ...
none2Crime is common to all cultures but is simultaneously culturally specific: narratives of crime,...
Abstract: This article takes up the question of “crime writing” and rejoins the debate around whethe...
In addition to co-editing, Nels Pearson (with Marc Singer) co-authored, Open Cases: Detection, (Post...
This book opens up a range of important perspectives on law and violence by considering the ways in ...
Crime fiction, if you choose to classify it in its broadest sense, has a very long history. Detectiv...
This paper locates the postcolonial crime novel as a space for disenfranchised groups to write back ...