aussiechica
Member
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2003
- Messages
- 127
Hello!
Hi- this is my first post here. This forum seems pretty awesome- just what I needed
Anyhow, my teacher set an essay, the title of which is:
While a set of conventions is central to traditional crime fiction, composers are judged by how effectively they manipulate these to create challenging and interesting variations and subversions of the gene
I think Im fine with the 2nd half of the question, but when I questioned her on exactly what traditional CF is, she just went all misty on me and gave me that 'figure it out for yourself my child' kind of look that she has.
Anyway, heres what Ive written.
Any suggestions corrections or ideas appreciated
You dont even have to refer to my giant gob of bullshit below, (actually, if you dont even wanna read it I understand, it is fairly long and boring) just an idea of what you think traditional CF is and a few quotes or sumthing to back it up would be ace
ok, what I have so far:
Genre theory deals with the ways in which a work may be considered to belong to a class of related works. The word genre if French, meaning gender or type.
The application of genre theory could perhaps be compared with the process of taxonomy in biology- the dissection of a work until it fits into a species of related works.
Brian Moon states that Genres are categories set up by the interaction of textual features and reading practises, which shape and limit the meanings readers can make with text.
Conventions within a particular genre are the implied rules with which composers follows, and which responders come to expect.
It is these inherent forms or purposes which, upon identification, categorise a text into a particular genre.
Crime fiction can be defined as a subgenre of fiction that deals with crimes and their detection and criminals and their motives.
Crime fiction is the umbrella title for a genre which has many facets and any number of subgenres contained within it. One of the most prevailing of these is the sub-genre of detective fiction. According to Roanld Knox, a detective story must have, as its main interest, the unravelling of a mystery; a mystery whose nature is such as to arouse curiosity, a curiosity which is gratified at the end. Also, with this sub genre is a sleuth of detective fiction sub-genres, one of the most popular of which was the who-dunnit, popularised in the 20s and 30s by the proclaimed grand dames of crime fiction Agatha Christie and Dorothy L Sayers.
Other detective fiction sub-genres include the hard boiled school, championed by writers such as Raymond Chandler and Jonathan Latimer and immortalised on celluloid in such films as The Big Sleep and The Maltese Falcon and the police procedual, some examples of which are Nelson DeMilles The Generals Daughter and Jeffery Deavers The Bone Collector.
Other sub genres of crime fiction include the caper novel , distinguished by use of humorous narration, scrambling action, bumbling but lovable characters and a driving undercurrent of sheer fun, the spy novel, or espionage thriller and the pyschological suspense novel.
Each of these subgenres has a different audience, set of values and set of conventions.
Therefore, describing traditional crime fiction from a scholastic point of view is nearly impossible. Tradition, as defined by the Oxford Dictionary, is an artistic or literary principle(s) based on accumulated experience or continued usage. Yet, there are no actual conventions of crime fiction, besides the actual rhubric of crime fiction- that there is crime / detection / criminals / their motives at the heart of the story, only conventions of crime fiction sub genres. And often, as these conventions often tend to contradict each other (ie. The Golden Age convention of ineptly of the police is directly discordant with the conventions of the sub-genre of the police procedural).
Therefore, there is no true traditional Crime Fiction idiom from a Scholastic perspective. Every work that may seem unconventional for its time shapes the genre of crime fiction, leaving new subgenera in its wake. As the John Hartley offered, the addition of just one film to the western genre...changes that genre as a whole- even though the Western in question may display few of the recognised conventions, styles or subject matters traditionally associated with the genre
However, from a pop-culture perspective, traditional crime fiction is accessible.
From this more informal perspective, traditional Crime Fiction is in fact, whatever the responder thinks it is. Many viewers may cite the works of Christie and Doyle as being the pinnacle of traditional crime fiction, others may consider the film noirs The Maltese Falcon and The Big Sleep as being the personification of perfect traditional crime fiction. As Jane Feur noted, Genre is ultimately an abstract conception, rather than something that exsists empirically in the world.
Therefore, traditional Crime fiction is any composition the respondant recognises as adhereing to the set conventions which they are familiar with
Thanks very much
AussieChica
Hi- this is my first post here. This forum seems pretty awesome- just what I needed
Anyhow, my teacher set an essay, the title of which is:
While a set of conventions is central to traditional crime fiction, composers are judged by how effectively they manipulate these to create challenging and interesting variations and subversions of the gene
I think Im fine with the 2nd half of the question, but when I questioned her on exactly what traditional CF is, she just went all misty on me and gave me that 'figure it out for yourself my child' kind of look that she has.
Anyway, heres what Ive written.
Any suggestions corrections or ideas appreciated
You dont even have to refer to my giant gob of bullshit below, (actually, if you dont even wanna read it I understand, it is fairly long and boring) just an idea of what you think traditional CF is and a few quotes or sumthing to back it up would be ace
ok, what I have so far:
Genre theory deals with the ways in which a work may be considered to belong to a class of related works. The word genre if French, meaning gender or type.
The application of genre theory could perhaps be compared with the process of taxonomy in biology- the dissection of a work until it fits into a species of related works.
Brian Moon states that Genres are categories set up by the interaction of textual features and reading practises, which shape and limit the meanings readers can make with text.
Conventions within a particular genre are the implied rules with which composers follows, and which responders come to expect.
It is these inherent forms or purposes which, upon identification, categorise a text into a particular genre.
Crime fiction can be defined as a subgenre of fiction that deals with crimes and their detection and criminals and their motives.
Crime fiction is the umbrella title for a genre which has many facets and any number of subgenres contained within it. One of the most prevailing of these is the sub-genre of detective fiction. According to Roanld Knox, a detective story must have, as its main interest, the unravelling of a mystery; a mystery whose nature is such as to arouse curiosity, a curiosity which is gratified at the end. Also, with this sub genre is a sleuth of detective fiction sub-genres, one of the most popular of which was the who-dunnit, popularised in the 20s and 30s by the proclaimed grand dames of crime fiction Agatha Christie and Dorothy L Sayers.
Other detective fiction sub-genres include the hard boiled school, championed by writers such as Raymond Chandler and Jonathan Latimer and immortalised on celluloid in such films as The Big Sleep and The Maltese Falcon and the police procedual, some examples of which are Nelson DeMilles The Generals Daughter and Jeffery Deavers The Bone Collector.
Other sub genres of crime fiction include the caper novel , distinguished by use of humorous narration, scrambling action, bumbling but lovable characters and a driving undercurrent of sheer fun, the spy novel, or espionage thriller and the pyschological suspense novel.
Each of these subgenres has a different audience, set of values and set of conventions.
Therefore, describing traditional crime fiction from a scholastic point of view is nearly impossible. Tradition, as defined by the Oxford Dictionary, is an artistic or literary principle(s) based on accumulated experience or continued usage. Yet, there are no actual conventions of crime fiction, besides the actual rhubric of crime fiction- that there is crime / detection / criminals / their motives at the heart of the story, only conventions of crime fiction sub genres. And often, as these conventions often tend to contradict each other (ie. The Golden Age convention of ineptly of the police is directly discordant with the conventions of the sub-genre of the police procedural).
Therefore, there is no true traditional Crime Fiction idiom from a Scholastic perspective. Every work that may seem unconventional for its time shapes the genre of crime fiction, leaving new subgenera in its wake. As the John Hartley offered, the addition of just one film to the western genre...changes that genre as a whole- even though the Western in question may display few of the recognised conventions, styles or subject matters traditionally associated with the genre
However, from a pop-culture perspective, traditional crime fiction is accessible.
From this more informal perspective, traditional Crime Fiction is in fact, whatever the responder thinks it is. Many viewers may cite the works of Christie and Doyle as being the pinnacle of traditional crime fiction, others may consider the film noirs The Maltese Falcon and The Big Sleep as being the personification of perfect traditional crime fiction. As Jane Feur noted, Genre is ultimately an abstract conception, rather than something that exsists empirically in the world.
Therefore, traditional Crime fiction is any composition the respondant recognises as adhereing to the set conventions which they are familiar with
Thanks very much
AussieChica