Available Formats
The Imagination of Evil: Detective Fiction and the Modern World
By (Author) Dr Mary Evans
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Continuum Publishing Corporation
27th October 2011
NIPPOD
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Crime and mystery fiction
809.3
Paperback
208
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
From its growth in Europe in the nineteenth century, detective fiction has developed into one of the most popular genres of literature and popular culture more widely.
In this monograph, Mary Evans examines detective fiction and its complex relationship to the modern and to modernity. She focuses on two key themes: the moral relationship of detection (and the detective) to a particular social world and the attempt to restore and even improve the social world that has been threatened and fractured by a crime, usually that of murder. It is a characteristic of much detective fiction that the detective, the pursuer, is a social outsider: this status creates a complex web of relationships between detective, institutional life and dominant and subversive moralities. Evans questions who and what the detective stands for and suggests that the answer challenges many of our assumptions about the relationship between various moralities in the modern world.
mention in THES by Karen Shook,16 July 2009
"[Evans] lightly explores a number of works of detective fiction for the past two centuries, seeking to understand how and why murder, in particular, is at the heart of this most popular of genre fictions. In doing so, she also implicitly seeks to understand why so many of us read and reread these novels about murder. While this study surveys a number of detective novels, it is also, more crucially, an examination of the social understanding of evil." Times Higher Education, February 2010
Mary Evans is Visiting Fellowat the Gender Institute at the London School of Economics, UK.