Wilkie Collins’ The Moonstone (1868) is frequently credited as the first English detective novel. The novel grips the reader into the mystery by infecting them with what is described as a “detective fever.” That is, readerly pleasure is contingent on uncovering the mystery. The pathology of “detective fever” is thus central to understanding the novel’s affective sensationalism. This paper situates Collins’ work in a Freudian and Focauldian model and argues that the desire to unveil feminine privacy underlies the detective aim. Thus, the gendered valence of detection is the primary characteristic of “detective fever.” The detective’s aim, then, closely aligns with what Foucault describes as the Victorian “incitement to discourse” of private ...
Examines the mechanisms through which Collins updated the gothic novel to create the sensation novel...
A variety of psychoanalytic readings of late-Victorian and early-twentieth century crime fiction oft...
Working with Fredric Jameson's understanding of genre as a "formal sedimentation" of an ideology, th...
This study analyzes and accounts for the mixed emotional responses to three Wilkie Collins novels: T...
As soon as the word ‘Thrill’ comes in our mind- a sudden surge of sentiments and emotions full of su...
Wilkie Collins was a master of the sensation fiction genre. He wrote multiple bestselling novels and...
Although some good work on Collins is now beginning to emerge, complex and central elements in his f...
This thesis considers the relationship between the novels of Wilkie Collins and nineteenth-century p...
Wilkie Collins is undeniably one of the initiators of the detective novel. The role he played in cre...
Sigmund Freud’s theory of psychoanalysis developed in the 1940s as mentioned in Barry (2002) was app...
Wilkie Collins is mainly remembered for his best-selling sensation novel The Woman in White and his ...
In 1861, in a review of Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White, a critic for the Spectator complained t...
Theorists of detective fiction usually discuss the genre’s interest in the discovery and expulsion o...
This dissertation examines detective fiction through the prism of confession. It argues that a certa...
explores the social role of women in Victorian England, a patriarchal society that forced women eith...
Examines the mechanisms through which Collins updated the gothic novel to create the sensation novel...
A variety of psychoanalytic readings of late-Victorian and early-twentieth century crime fiction oft...
Working with Fredric Jameson's understanding of genre as a "formal sedimentation" of an ideology, th...
This study analyzes and accounts for the mixed emotional responses to three Wilkie Collins novels: T...
As soon as the word ‘Thrill’ comes in our mind- a sudden surge of sentiments and emotions full of su...
Wilkie Collins was a master of the sensation fiction genre. He wrote multiple bestselling novels and...
Although some good work on Collins is now beginning to emerge, complex and central elements in his f...
This thesis considers the relationship between the novels of Wilkie Collins and nineteenth-century p...
Wilkie Collins is undeniably one of the initiators of the detective novel. The role he played in cre...
Sigmund Freud’s theory of psychoanalysis developed in the 1940s as mentioned in Barry (2002) was app...
Wilkie Collins is mainly remembered for his best-selling sensation novel The Woman in White and his ...
In 1861, in a review of Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White, a critic for the Spectator complained t...
Theorists of detective fiction usually discuss the genre’s interest in the discovery and expulsion o...
This dissertation examines detective fiction through the prism of confession. It argues that a certa...
explores the social role of women in Victorian England, a patriarchal society that forced women eith...
Examines the mechanisms through which Collins updated the gothic novel to create the sensation novel...
A variety of psychoanalytic readings of late-Victorian and early-twentieth century crime fiction oft...
Working with Fredric Jameson's understanding of genre as a "formal sedimentation" of an ideology, th...