The criminal poetics of the detecting body in Gillian Flynn's Sharp objects

Domestic noir, a 21st -century subgenre of crime fiction is famous for its subversive take on seemingly safe and comforting concepts: it discloses the home and the family as socio-cultural and spatial arrangements hiding dangerous prospects for its inhabitants, especially unsuspecting heroines. The...

Teljes leírás

Elmentve itt :
Bibliográfiai részletek
Szerző: Szarvas Réka
További közreműködők: Flynn Gillian
Dokumentumtípus: Könyv része
Megjelent: SZTE IEAS Szeged 2024
Sorozat:Acta Universitatis Szegediensis de Attila József nominatae : papers in english and american studies 28
Papers in English and American studies : Tomus XXVIII. - New Horizons in English and American Studies: Papers from the Doctoral Program 28
Kulcsszavak:Amerikai irodalom története - 21. sz., Műelemzés - angol
Tárgyszavak:
Online Access:http://acta.bibl.u-szeged.hu/86788
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520 3 |a Domestic noir, a 21st -century subgenre of crime fiction is famous for its subversive take on seemingly safe and comforting concepts: it discloses the home and the family as socio-cultural and spatial arrangements hiding dangerous prospects for its inhabitants, especially unsuspecting heroines. The primarily female-authored genre – a descendant of the female gothic – often highlights the toxic nature of societal expectations prescribed by conservative patriarchal models of femininity. Focusing on Gillian Flynn’s debut novel, Sharp Objects, I wish to argue that the amateur detective anti-heroine Camille’s self-cutting can be interpreted as an embodied means of feminine writing against domestic entrapment. The diary she carves into her flesh resonates with French feminist theorists’ écriture féminine, while it also functions as a compensatory means of communicating repressed psychic contents. It is a way to cope with trauma through the performative storytelling of self-mutilation that traces signs for the detective and the reader to decode. 
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