侦探小说
矛盾心理
文学类
历史
艺术
心理学
精神分析
出处
期刊:Crime fiction studies
[Edinburgh University Press]
日期:2020-08-19
卷期号:1 (2): 157-172
被引量:10
标识
DOI:10.3366/cfs.2020.0018
摘要
Building on Tzvetan Todorov's observation that the detective novel ‘contains not one but two stories: the story of the crime and the story of the investigation’, this essay argues that detective novels display a remarkably wide range of attitudes toward the several pasts they represent: the pasts of the crime, the community, the criminal, the detective, and public history. It traces a series of defining shifts in these attitudes through the evolution of five distinct subgenres of detective fiction: exploits of a Great Detective like Sherlock Holmes, Golden Age whodunits that pose as intellectual puzzles to be solved, hardboiled stories that invoke a distant past that the present both breaks with and echoes, police procedurals that unfold in an indefinitely extended present, and historical mysteries that nostalgically fetishize the past. It concludes with a brief consideration of genre readers’ own ambivalent phenomenological investment in the past, present, and future each detective story projects.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI