Laura holds a privileged place in detective fiction and film noir, yet Vera Caspary’s novel has received little critical attention. This paper asserts that Caspary’s novel, written within a context of a hypermasculine culture, constitutes a significant feminist revision of the genre that disrupts the hardboiled/scientific binary. By self-reflexively reworking the tropes of the hardboiled detective and using a casebook format associated with scientific detectives, the author crafts a narrative free from the strictures of a male-centered genre, creating a noir novel that boldly breaks from its hardboiled contemporaries
Agatha Christie’s name is synonymous with the Whodunit. She is without a doubt one the most popular ...
For years, best-selling mystery writer Agatha Christie (1890–1976) was dismissed as a prolific hack ...
Feminist critics tend to disagree whether the parachuting of women into traditionally male roles—for...
Laura holds a privileged place in detective fiction and film noir, yet Vera Caspary’s novel has rece...
Dangerous and enigmatic women have fascinated people for centuries. In the United States, the femme...
While the crime genre may have seemed as purely masculine for the greater part of its history, femin...
Lesbian detective fiction offers a fundamental challenge to the accepted conventions of detection ge...
As feminist re-writings of the genre of crime fiction (mostly the hard-boiled) from the 1980s onward...
This thesis examines the perceived incompatibility of incorporating feminist values into the hard-bo...
As Mandel (1996) argues, there appears, in terms of detective character, an attempt to rebuild the ...
This thesis undertakes to show the way in which texts of the genre of hard-boiled detective fiction ...
Viewed through the lens of feminist criminology, how does the subgenre of domestic noir dramatise do...
In the nineteen-eighties a host of female detectives appeared in crime fiction authored by women. O...
Crime writing is a significant instantiation of gender ideology. Mainstream crime writing (the low-b...
Abstract Between the elite intellectual culture of high modernist literary experimentation and the l...
Agatha Christie’s name is synonymous with the Whodunit. She is without a doubt one the most popular ...
For years, best-selling mystery writer Agatha Christie (1890–1976) was dismissed as a prolific hack ...
Feminist critics tend to disagree whether the parachuting of women into traditionally male roles—for...
Laura holds a privileged place in detective fiction and film noir, yet Vera Caspary’s novel has rece...
Dangerous and enigmatic women have fascinated people for centuries. In the United States, the femme...
While the crime genre may have seemed as purely masculine for the greater part of its history, femin...
Lesbian detective fiction offers a fundamental challenge to the accepted conventions of detection ge...
As feminist re-writings of the genre of crime fiction (mostly the hard-boiled) from the 1980s onward...
This thesis examines the perceived incompatibility of incorporating feminist values into the hard-bo...
As Mandel (1996) argues, there appears, in terms of detective character, an attempt to rebuild the ...
This thesis undertakes to show the way in which texts of the genre of hard-boiled detective fiction ...
Viewed through the lens of feminist criminology, how does the subgenre of domestic noir dramatise do...
In the nineteen-eighties a host of female detectives appeared in crime fiction authored by women. O...
Crime writing is a significant instantiation of gender ideology. Mainstream crime writing (the low-b...
Abstract Between the elite intellectual culture of high modernist literary experimentation and the l...
Agatha Christie’s name is synonymous with the Whodunit. She is without a doubt one the most popular ...
For years, best-selling mystery writer Agatha Christie (1890–1976) was dismissed as a prolific hack ...
Feminist critics tend to disagree whether the parachuting of women into traditionally male roles—for...