This article aims to put a theoretical frame around the concept of the critical-creative nexus as it manifests itself in detective fiction. It argues that critical and creative practices in the context of detective fiction, and by extension in popular literature in general, are deeply interconnected: the writing of detective fiction always involves a critical positioning in relation to established genre conventions, while, conversely, detective fiction criticism, and certainly its most important exempla, involves an element of the creative, stretching from imaginative readings to a complete critical rewriting of the individual story. The article concludes by suggesting that the concept of the critical creative nexus results in a new underst...
This thesis grapples with the curious relationship of the metaphors of detection and reading. Detect...
The essays in this collection are based on papers given at a conference on detective fiction in Euro...
Starting from the early–twentieth-century criticism of the “clue-puzzle” tradition, the author inves...
The article examines metatextual devices appearing within texts whose genre affiliation — the implem...
In modern culture, there is the convergence of mass and elite literature, which is manifested in the...
Far from being objective entities, literary genres should be regarded as cultural constructs, the de...
This book establishes the genealogy of a subgenre of crime fiction that Antoine Dechêne calls the me...
Creative writing research offers a unique opportunity to draw together threads of inquiry from the r...
From its growth in Europe in the nineteenth century, detective fiction has developed into one of the...
In the late 1920s Dorothy L. Sayers, despite her impressive contributions to the crime fiction genre...
'Detective Fiction' is a clear and compelling look at some of the best known, yet least-understood c...
This thesis constitutes the first attempt to examine formally the use of self-referential forms in t...
The failure of high-profile criminal investigations and falling detection rates have led to public c...
Critical writing and creative writing are often considered to be separate and contrasting activities...
In spite of the assumed rigidity of the “formula”, the figure of the fictional detective has changed...
This thesis grapples with the curious relationship of the metaphors of detection and reading. Detect...
The essays in this collection are based on papers given at a conference on detective fiction in Euro...
Starting from the early–twentieth-century criticism of the “clue-puzzle” tradition, the author inves...
The article examines metatextual devices appearing within texts whose genre affiliation — the implem...
In modern culture, there is the convergence of mass and elite literature, which is manifested in the...
Far from being objective entities, literary genres should be regarded as cultural constructs, the de...
This book establishes the genealogy of a subgenre of crime fiction that Antoine Dechêne calls the me...
Creative writing research offers a unique opportunity to draw together threads of inquiry from the r...
From its growth in Europe in the nineteenth century, detective fiction has developed into one of the...
In the late 1920s Dorothy L. Sayers, despite her impressive contributions to the crime fiction genre...
'Detective Fiction' is a clear and compelling look at some of the best known, yet least-understood c...
This thesis constitutes the first attempt to examine formally the use of self-referential forms in t...
The failure of high-profile criminal investigations and falling detection rates have led to public c...
Critical writing and creative writing are often considered to be separate and contrasting activities...
In spite of the assumed rigidity of the “formula”, the figure of the fictional detective has changed...
This thesis grapples with the curious relationship of the metaphors of detection and reading. Detect...
The essays in this collection are based on papers given at a conference on detective fiction in Euro...
Starting from the early–twentieth-century criticism of the “clue-puzzle” tradition, the author inves...