Unwilling Executioner: Crime Fiction and the State

Unwilling Executioner

Crime Fiction and the State
 
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Date of Publication:
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9780198831129
ISBN10:0198831129
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:288 pages
Size:234x154x14 mm
Language:English
140
Category:
Short description:

Unwilling Executioner is the first book to examine the deep-rooted relationship between the development of crime fiction as a genre and the consolidation of the modern state.

Long description:
What gives crime fiction its distinctive shape and form? What makes it such a compelling vehicle of social and political critique? Unwilling Executioner argues that the answer lies in the emerging genre's complex and intimate relationship with the bureaucratic state and modern capitalism, and the contradictions that ensue once the state assumes control of the criminal justice system. This study offers a dramatic new interpretation of the genre's emergence and evolution over a three hundred year period and as a genuinely transnational phenomenon. From its roots in the tales of criminality circulated widely in Paris and London in the early eighteenth century, this book examines the extraordinary richness, diversity, and complexity of the genre's subsequent thematizations of crime and policing?moving from France and Britain and from continental Europe and the United States to other parts of the globe. In doing so it offers new ways of reading established crime novelists like Gaboriau, Doyle, Hammett, and Simenon, beyond their national contexts and an impulse to characterize their work as either straightforwardly 'radical' or 'conservative'. It also argues for the centrality of writers like Defoe, Gay, Godwin, Vidocq, Morrison, and more recently Manchette, Himes, and Sjöwall and Wahlöö to a project where crime and policing are rooted, and shown to be rooted, in the social and economic conditions of their time. These are all deeply political writers even if their novels exhibit no interest in directly promoting political causes or parties. The result is an agile, layered, and far-reaching account of the crime story's ambivalent relationship to the justice system and its move to complicate our understanding of what crime is and how society is policed and for whose benefit.

Pepper offers nothing less than a long history of the crime novel as world literature, its roots in England but its branches universal.
Table of Contents:
Introduction: Crime Fiction as Unwilling Executioner
'A Life of Horrid and Inimitable Wickedness': Crime, Law, and Punishment in Early Eighteenth-century London and Paris
'Let Us Attack Injustice at Its Source': Crime Literature in an Era of Revolution and Reform
'A Mysterious Power Whose Hand is Everywhere': Imagining the State and Codifying the Law in the Mid-nineteenth Century
Crime, Business, and Liberty at the Turn of the Century: The Individual, the State, and the Emergence of Modern Capitalism
'No Good for Business': States of Crime in the 1920s and 1930s
'On the Barricades': Crime Fiction and Commitment in an Era of Radical Politics
From Sovereignty to Neoliberalism: Crime Fiction in the Contemporary World
Conclusion
Select Bibliography
Index