Monstrum : the vampire in the detective story /


Autoria(s): Stikkelbroeck, Caroline.
Contribuinte(s)

Popular Culture Program

Data(s)

21/05/2009

21/05/2009

21/05/2007

Resumo

My approach to the vampire detective highlights its connections to the private detective's story and reveals the monstrous investigators' debt to early feminist forms of detection -specifically in their reformation of the' other' and of traditional forms of power and authority. Seen in this light the movement of horror's imaginary 'other' into the rational world of detection can be seen as not an abrupt breach of detection's realist conventions, but an almost seamless transition into symbolic spaces that point to the detective's primary function -- to make sense of the senseless. It is in this light that I explore the monster that is a detective as a symbol that is also a sense-maker, and a quintessential postmodern figure. I argue that the distinctions between monsters and 'others', and between popular narratives and postmodern religion have faded, culminating in a character that can not only model 'otherness' as an exemplary condition, but also provide strategies for modeling the form of active postmodern subjectivity that postmodern theorist Jim Collins' (1989) conceives of as heretical activity.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10464/1408

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Brock University

Palavras-Chave #Vampires in literature. #Detective and mystery stories.
Tipo

Electronic Thesis or Dissertation