A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.

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Superior document:Crime Files Series
:
Place / Publishing House:Cham : : Palgrave Macmillan,, 2023.
©2023.
Year of Publication:2023
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Crime Files Series
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Physical Description:1 online resource (215 pages)
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id 50030642588
ctrlnum (MiAaPQ)50030642588
(Au-PeEL)EBL30642588
(OCoLC)1390739393
collection bib_alma
record_format marc
spelling Link, Sarah J.
A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.
1st ed.
Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, 2023.
©2023.
1 online resource (215 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Crime Files Series
Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Reading Lists, Listing Clues -- Chapter 2: Defining Detective Fiction -- Precursors, Influences, Developments: From the Newgate Calendar to the Golden Age -- Beginnings: The Newgate Calendar -- Influences: Edgar Allan Poe, Eugène Vidoq, and Émile Gaboriau -- Precursors: Sensation Fiction -- Detectives and the Police -- Doyle and Positivism -- The Golden Age: Fair Play and the Clue Puzzle -- Excursus: Lists in the History of Detective Fiction-The Rule Catalogs of the Golden Age -- Chapter 3: Dossier Novels: The Reader as Detective -- Detection as a Scientific Process: Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery -- The Role of the Reader -- Detection as a Process -- Processes of Exactitude: Footnotes and Cross-referencing -- Processes of Exactitude: Structuring -- The Evidentiary Force of Authenticity -- Mesmerism, Lists, and Science -- Detection as a Game: The Murder Dossiers -- Murder Off Miami: The Case File -- Reading Strategies -- Herewith the Clues: The (Detection) Game -- Chapter 4: Manipulating Readers: The Novels of Agatha Christie -- Manipulating the Reader: Creating Patterns of Thinking -- Form and Attention -- Relevance and Visibility -- Categorization -- The Fair Play Rule -- Lists as the Detective's Tool: Creating Order -- Representing Thoughts -- Concealing Thoughts -- Breaking Down the Problem: Managing Boundaries -- Lists and Humor: A Meta-commentary on Detective Fiction -- Chapter 5: Excursus: The Thorndyke Novels and the Language of Science -- Creating Scientificity -- Framing: Language and Form -- Expert Knowledge -- Science Meets Creativity: Hypothesizing About Thorndyke's Method -- Chapter 6: Lists and Knowledge -- Sherlock Holmes and the (Victorian) Dream of Total Knowledge.
Too Much to Know: Knowledge and Paper Technologies -- Listing Knowledge and the Encyclopedic Impulse -- The Adventure of the Reference Works -- The Case of the Case Index: On Absent Referents -- Knowledge and Visibility: The BBC's Sherlock -- Making Meaning Visible: Shared Affordances of Lists and Maps -- Knowledge, Lists, and Maps in the BBC's Sherlock -- Spatialization and Accessibility -- Navigating and Interpreting Knowledge -- Memory as Objective Data -- Compartmentalization -- Chapter 7: Conclusion: Models of Knowledge in Detective Fiction -- Works Cited -- Index.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic books.
Print version: Link, Sarah J. A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction Cham : Palgrave Macmillan,c2023 9783031332265
ProQuest (Firm)
https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=30642588 Click to View
language English
format eBook
author Link, Sarah J.
spellingShingle Link, Sarah J.
A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.
Crime Files Series
Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Reading Lists, Listing Clues -- Chapter 2: Defining Detective Fiction -- Precursors, Influences, Developments: From the Newgate Calendar to the Golden Age -- Beginnings: The Newgate Calendar -- Influences: Edgar Allan Poe, Eugène Vidoq, and Émile Gaboriau -- Precursors: Sensation Fiction -- Detectives and the Police -- Doyle and Positivism -- The Golden Age: Fair Play and the Clue Puzzle -- Excursus: Lists in the History of Detective Fiction-The Rule Catalogs of the Golden Age -- Chapter 3: Dossier Novels: The Reader as Detective -- Detection as a Scientific Process: Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery -- The Role of the Reader -- Detection as a Process -- Processes of Exactitude: Footnotes and Cross-referencing -- Processes of Exactitude: Structuring -- The Evidentiary Force of Authenticity -- Mesmerism, Lists, and Science -- Detection as a Game: The Murder Dossiers -- Murder Off Miami: The Case File -- Reading Strategies -- Herewith the Clues: The (Detection) Game -- Chapter 4: Manipulating Readers: The Novels of Agatha Christie -- Manipulating the Reader: Creating Patterns of Thinking -- Form and Attention -- Relevance and Visibility -- Categorization -- The Fair Play Rule -- Lists as the Detective's Tool: Creating Order -- Representing Thoughts -- Concealing Thoughts -- Breaking Down the Problem: Managing Boundaries -- Lists and Humor: A Meta-commentary on Detective Fiction -- Chapter 5: Excursus: The Thorndyke Novels and the Language of Science -- Creating Scientificity -- Framing: Language and Form -- Expert Knowledge -- Science Meets Creativity: Hypothesizing About Thorndyke's Method -- Chapter 6: Lists and Knowledge -- Sherlock Holmes and the (Victorian) Dream of Total Knowledge.
Too Much to Know: Knowledge and Paper Technologies -- Listing Knowledge and the Encyclopedic Impulse -- The Adventure of the Reference Works -- The Case of the Case Index: On Absent Referents -- Knowledge and Visibility: The BBC's Sherlock -- Making Meaning Visible: Shared Affordances of Lists and Maps -- Knowledge, Lists, and Maps in the BBC's Sherlock -- Spatialization and Accessibility -- Navigating and Interpreting Knowledge -- Memory as Objective Data -- Compartmentalization -- Chapter 7: Conclusion: Models of Knowledge in Detective Fiction -- Works Cited -- Index.
author_facet Link, Sarah J.
author_variant s j l sj sjl
author_sort Link, Sarah J.
title A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.
title_full A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.
title_fullStr A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.
title_full_unstemmed A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.
title_auth A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.
title_new A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.
title_sort a narratological approach to lists in detective fiction.
series Crime Files Series
series2 Crime Files Series
publisher Palgrave Macmillan,
publishDate 2023
physical 1 online resource (215 pages)
edition 1st ed.
contents Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Reading Lists, Listing Clues -- Chapter 2: Defining Detective Fiction -- Precursors, Influences, Developments: From the Newgate Calendar to the Golden Age -- Beginnings: The Newgate Calendar -- Influences: Edgar Allan Poe, Eugène Vidoq, and Émile Gaboriau -- Precursors: Sensation Fiction -- Detectives and the Police -- Doyle and Positivism -- The Golden Age: Fair Play and the Clue Puzzle -- Excursus: Lists in the History of Detective Fiction-The Rule Catalogs of the Golden Age -- Chapter 3: Dossier Novels: The Reader as Detective -- Detection as a Scientific Process: Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery -- The Role of the Reader -- Detection as a Process -- Processes of Exactitude: Footnotes and Cross-referencing -- Processes of Exactitude: Structuring -- The Evidentiary Force of Authenticity -- Mesmerism, Lists, and Science -- Detection as a Game: The Murder Dossiers -- Murder Off Miami: The Case File -- Reading Strategies -- Herewith the Clues: The (Detection) Game -- Chapter 4: Manipulating Readers: The Novels of Agatha Christie -- Manipulating the Reader: Creating Patterns of Thinking -- Form and Attention -- Relevance and Visibility -- Categorization -- The Fair Play Rule -- Lists as the Detective's Tool: Creating Order -- Representing Thoughts -- Concealing Thoughts -- Breaking Down the Problem: Managing Boundaries -- Lists and Humor: A Meta-commentary on Detective Fiction -- Chapter 5: Excursus: The Thorndyke Novels and the Language of Science -- Creating Scientificity -- Framing: Language and Form -- Expert Knowledge -- Science Meets Creativity: Hypothesizing About Thorndyke's Method -- Chapter 6: Lists and Knowledge -- Sherlock Holmes and the (Victorian) Dream of Total Knowledge.
Too Much to Know: Knowledge and Paper Technologies -- Listing Knowledge and the Encyclopedic Impulse -- The Adventure of the Reference Works -- The Case of the Case Index: On Absent Referents -- Knowledge and Visibility: The BBC's Sherlock -- Making Meaning Visible: Shared Affordances of Lists and Maps -- Knowledge, Lists, and Maps in the BBC's Sherlock -- Spatialization and Accessibility -- Navigating and Interpreting Knowledge -- Memory as Objective Data -- Compartmentalization -- Chapter 7: Conclusion: Models of Knowledge in Detective Fiction -- Works Cited -- Index.
isbn 9783031332272
9783031332265
callnumber-first P - Language and Literature
callnumber-subject PN - General Literature
callnumber-label PN770-779
callnumber-sort PN 3770 3779
genre Electronic books.
genre_facet Electronic books.
url https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=30642588
illustrated Not Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 800 - Literature
dewey-tens 800 - Literature, rhetoric & criticism
dewey-ones 809 - History, description & criticism
dewey-full 809.3872
dewey-sort 3809.3872
dewey-raw 809.3872
dewey-search 809.3872
oclc_num 1390739393
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carrierType_str_mv cr
hierarchy_parent_title Crime Files Series
is_hierarchy_title A Narratological Approach to Lists in Detective Fiction.
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