This article explores connections between eighteenth/early nineteenth century forms of crime writing and police memoir-fiction – a genre that deserves greater recognition for its contribution to the development of the detective genre. It does this through examining how eighteenth/early nineteenth century crime-writing and mid-Victorian police memoirs were connected through their interest in examining private spaces associated with criminality and rendering them public, yet which remained distinct from each other through their different representations of police officers and detectives
The chapter explores the role of the uniformed police in crime detection in connection with a murder...
The concept of the underworld is a central feature in popular histories of crime and criminal behavi...
This Master Project presents evidence showing why mystery and detective fiction flourished during th...
This thesis explores the connections between the nineteenth century periodical press and the develop...
The mechanics of detection and figures with an investigatory function appeared in fictional texts in...
This thesis evaluates the development of surveillance-based undercover policing in Victorian England...
This thesis argues that the representation of male thieves in eighteenth-century criminal life-writi...
This thesis argues that the representation of male thieves in eighteenth-century criminal life-writi...
This thesis analyses policing and crime control in nineteenth-century England, through a case study ...
This article is devoted to the study of detective literature, which is one of its own genres. it dis...
This article examines the policing of that most important site for leisure and pleasure among the Vi...
Sensation literature refuses to participate in the familiar construction of domesticity as a refuge ...
Despite growing understanding of the police regulation of the urban sphere in nineteenth-century Bri...
This thesis is presented in two sections; the first, ‘Policing Print: The novel and the practice of ...
Working with Fredric Jameson's understanding of genre as a "formal sedimentation" of an ideology, th...
The chapter explores the role of the uniformed police in crime detection in connection with a murder...
The concept of the underworld is a central feature in popular histories of crime and criminal behavi...
This Master Project presents evidence showing why mystery and detective fiction flourished during th...
This thesis explores the connections between the nineteenth century periodical press and the develop...
The mechanics of detection and figures with an investigatory function appeared in fictional texts in...
This thesis evaluates the development of surveillance-based undercover policing in Victorian England...
This thesis argues that the representation of male thieves in eighteenth-century criminal life-writi...
This thesis argues that the representation of male thieves in eighteenth-century criminal life-writi...
This thesis analyses policing and crime control in nineteenth-century England, through a case study ...
This article is devoted to the study of detective literature, which is one of its own genres. it dis...
This article examines the policing of that most important site for leisure and pleasure among the Vi...
Sensation literature refuses to participate in the familiar construction of domesticity as a refuge ...
Despite growing understanding of the police regulation of the urban sphere in nineteenth-century Bri...
This thesis is presented in two sections; the first, ‘Policing Print: The novel and the practice of ...
Working with Fredric Jameson's understanding of genre as a "formal sedimentation" of an ideology, th...
The chapter explores the role of the uniformed police in crime detection in connection with a murder...
The concept of the underworld is a central feature in popular histories of crime and criminal behavi...
This Master Project presents evidence showing why mystery and detective fiction flourished during th...