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Crime Fiction: New Perspectives on Detection - Einzelansicht
Funktionen:
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Veranstaltungsart
Blockveranstaltung
Veranstaltungsnummer
SWS
2
Semester
WiSe 2019/20
Einrichtung
Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik
Sprache
englisch
Weitere Links
comment
Belegungsfrist
01.10.2019 - 20.11.2019
Belegung über PULS
Gruppe 1:
Vormerken:
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Tag
Zeit
Rhythmus
Dauer
Raum
Lehrperson
Ausfall-/Ausweichtermine
Max. Teilnehmer/-innen
Blockveranstaltung
Fr
14:00 bis 20:00
Einzeltermin
am 18.10.2019
1.19.0.31
PD Dr. Hartung
30
Blockveranstaltung
Fr
14:00 bis 20:00
Einzeltermin
am 22.11.2019
1.19.0.31
PD Dr. Hartung
30
Einzeltermine:
22.11.2019
Blockveranstaltung
Sa
10:00 bis 18:00
Einzeltermin
am 23.11.2019
1.19.0.31
PD Dr. Hartung
30
Blockveranstaltung
Fr
14:00 bis 20:00
Einzeltermin
am 10.01.2020
1.19.0.31
PD Dr. Hartung
30
Blockveranstaltung
Sa
10:00 bis 18:00
Einzeltermin
am 11.01.2020
1.19.0.31
PD Dr. Hartung
30
Kommentar
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Crime fiction is an ambivalent genre, which relies on typical narrative features and recognizable formulae, while self-reflexively drawing attention to how the individual story differs from its generic predecessors. The genre’s historical beginnigs are rooted in the nineteenth-century emergence of the professional detective and are implicated with the rise of American and English criminology and forensics. Postmodern fiction has employed the recognizable genre in order to parody and rewrite it into literature, while the metaphysical detective story ends with a question rather than the expected answer or solution to the crime. In the twenty-first century, some detective fiction has taken over the function of social realism from the nineteenth-century novel. In order to study this hybrid and productive genre we will look at the history of crime fiction from Edgar Allan Poe’s short stories and Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories to golden age detective fiction, hard-boiled crime fiction and its appropriations to more recent sub-genres such as the police procedural, the noir and anti-conspiracy thriller. We will pursue poststructuralist analogies between detection and the reading process and examine the function of intertextuality in detective novels. Other relevant approaches include the materialist focus on the body and the corpse in classical crime fiction as well as the relevance of such identity categories as gender, ethnicity and age to the detective genre.
Literatur
A detailed reading list will be made accessible in due course.
Leistungsnachweis
Regular and active participation in the seminar is expected, which includes a session chair and a short essay of 1000 words (Testat).
Strukturbaum
Keine Einordnung ins Vorlesungsverzeichnis vorhanden. Veranstaltung ist aus dem Semester WiSe 2019/20 , Aktuelles Semester: WiSe 2024/25
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