This article takes as its subject a nineteenth-century detective story: S.A. Panov’s Murder in Medveditsa Village (1872). Panov’s work is remarkable amongst its contemporaries for the way in which it interrogates the relative authority of the written and the spoken word in the criminal investigation and, in so doing, foregrounds the role and status that detective fiction assigns to language. The aim of the present article is to discuss the ambiguously nuanced illustration Panov provides of the relative power of written, spoken and non-verbal language in the particular context of the functioning of the law and the pursuit of the ‘truth’, two cornerstones of detective fiction. Language, and especially the written word, is thus shown to play t...
The study presents a comparative perspective of the elements of the detective story in traditional ...
The present article presents an analysis of a Lutsk Karaim literary work, namely Sergiusz Rudkowski’...
The crime in the library, or how to read a detective novelTaking The Body in the Library by Agatha C...
Detective or crime fiction was a relatively late arrival on the Russian literary scene, lagging behi...
This article examines the representation of space and place in a work of nineteenth-century Russian ...
The article deals with one of the elements of the investigator’s speech behavior - didacticism durin...
The paper reevaluates an obscure, German-language crime novel from the nineteenth century and its be...
Among the many characters we encounter in Dostoevsky’s novels, some catch our attention because they...
This thesis is devoted to a relatively little explored issue - the social differentiation of literar...
The paper situates the novel geographically and historically, while considering its place in the dev...
The article is an attempt to illustrate the female writers influence on the evolution of the crime f...
This article traces the development trajectory of the detective genre in Russian literature. The dir...
This article discusses the work of Russia’s first female crime writer: Aleksandra Sokolova (1833-191...
This article discusses the work of Russia’s first female crime writer: Aleksandra Sokolova (1833-191...
Fyodor Dostoyevsky is one of the biggest master of the world literature, he is the creator of the th...
The study presents a comparative perspective of the elements of the detective story in traditional ...
The present article presents an analysis of a Lutsk Karaim literary work, namely Sergiusz Rudkowski’...
The crime in the library, or how to read a detective novelTaking The Body in the Library by Agatha C...
Detective or crime fiction was a relatively late arrival on the Russian literary scene, lagging behi...
This article examines the representation of space and place in a work of nineteenth-century Russian ...
The article deals with one of the elements of the investigator’s speech behavior - didacticism durin...
The paper reevaluates an obscure, German-language crime novel from the nineteenth century and its be...
Among the many characters we encounter in Dostoevsky’s novels, some catch our attention because they...
This thesis is devoted to a relatively little explored issue - the social differentiation of literar...
The paper situates the novel geographically and historically, while considering its place in the dev...
The article is an attempt to illustrate the female writers influence on the evolution of the crime f...
This article traces the development trajectory of the detective genre in Russian literature. The dir...
This article discusses the work of Russia’s first female crime writer: Aleksandra Sokolova (1833-191...
This article discusses the work of Russia’s first female crime writer: Aleksandra Sokolova (1833-191...
Fyodor Dostoyevsky is one of the biggest master of the world literature, he is the creator of the th...
The study presents a comparative perspective of the elements of the detective story in traditional ...
The present article presents an analysis of a Lutsk Karaim literary work, namely Sergiusz Rudkowski’...
The crime in the library, or how to read a detective novelTaking The Body in the Library by Agatha C...