Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Women detectives – Sweden – Fiction »

Créez une référence correcte selon les styles APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard et plusieurs autres

Choisissez une source :

Consultez les listes thématiques d’articles de revues, de livres, de thèses, de rapports de conférences et d’autres sources académiques sur le sujet « Women detectives – Sweden – Fiction ».

À côté de chaque source dans la liste de références il y a un bouton « Ajouter à la bibliographie ». Cliquez sur ce bouton, et nous générerons automatiquement la référence bibliographique pour la source choisie selon votre style de citation préféré : APA, MLA, Harvard, Vancouver, Chicago, etc.

Vous pouvez aussi télécharger le texte intégral de la publication scolaire au format pdf et consulter son résumé en ligne lorsque ces informations sont inclues dans les métadonnées.

Articles de revues sur le sujet "Women detectives – Sweden – Fiction"

1

Lingard, John. « Kurt Wallander’s Journey into Autumn : A Reading of Henning Mankell's The Fifth Woman ». Scandinavian-Canadian Studies 17 (1 décembre 2007) : 104–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/scancan25.

Texte intégral
Résumé :
ABSTRACT: The last decade has been a golden age of detective fiction in the four Scandinavian countries: Sweden; Denmark; Norway; and Iceland. If Henning Mankell stands in the first rank of Nordic mystery writers, it is because he takes the type of book known in Sweden as a “deckare” and gives it the complexity of a superior novel. Mankell not only endows his now famous detective, Kurt Wallander, with a brooding depth of character, but places him in a strikingly realistic setting, and a three-dimensional social context subject to the forces of change. Like the novels of Fyodor Dostoevsky and Thomas Hardy, the Wallander series has a memorable balance of plot, character, and atmosphere. In an article in The New York Times Book Review, Marilyn Stasio provides a concise summation of Mankell’s strengths as a novelist: “Apart from his uncommon skill at devising dense, multilayered plots, Mankell’s forte is matching mood to setting and subject.”
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
2

Fadhila, Alya Khoirunnisa, et Ida Rochani Adi. « Women Detectives in Detective Fiction : A Formula Analysis on <em>Dublin Murder Squad</em> ; Series ». Lexicon 8, no 1 (7 avril 2022) : 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/lexicon.v8i1.73421.

Texte intégral
Résumé :
This paper studies the formulation of two women detectives in Tana French’s work, Cassie Maddox and Antoinette Conway, in the Dublin Murder Squad Series by exploring the hard-boiled fiction conventions which underlie the formulation of Tana French’s two female detectives. The objective of this study is to determine how French innovates the hard-boiled fiction conventions in the formation of her women detective characters, Cassie Maddox and Antoinette Conway. By employing formula analysis as theorized by John G. Cawelti (1976), the results of this study show that French innovates the hard-boiled formula in four aspects. First, French innovates the hard-boiled formula by expanding the concept of marginality from economic class to gender and race. The second innovation is the substitution of the hard-boiled convention which emphasizes on masculine toughness with resistance to patriarchal control. Third, French re-established the relationship between the detective and the character femme fatale. Their similarity of female experiences and perspective with the femme fatale makes these women detectives not only reveal the femme fatale as a murderer, but also the motives and scenarios behind their acts. Finally, French also innovates the antithetical nature of the hard-boiled detective’s presentation by offering a ‘feminine’ path to justice. These observations show that French’s innovations on hard-boiled conventions on her women detectives are the extensions of the women investigators in the antecedent feminist revisions of the hard-boiled stories which are heavily influenced by the second-wave feminist values. However, Tana French also inserts her own commentary on the new variants of female character shaped by the new post-feminist discourse which separates her women detectives from those in the antecedent feminist hard-boiled revision series.
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
3

Orr, David MR. « Dementia and detectives : Alzheimer’s disease in crime fiction ». Dementia 19, no 3 (28 mai 2018) : 560–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1471301218778398.

Texte intégral
Résumé :
Fictional representations of dementia have burgeoned in recent years, and scholars have amply explored their double-edged capacity to promote tragic perspectives or normalising images of ‘living well’ with the condition. Yet to date, there has been only sparse consideration of the treatment afforded dementia within the genre of crime fiction. Focusing on two novels, Emma Healey’s Elizabeth is Missing and Alice LaPlante’s Turn of Mind, this article considers what it means in relation to the ethics of representation that these authors choose to cast as their amateur detective narrators women who have dementia. Analysing how their narrative portrayals frame the experience of living with dementia, it becomes apparent that features of the crime genre inflect the meanings conveyed. While aspects of the novels may reinforce problem-based discourses around dementia, in other respects they may spur meaningful reflection about it among the large readership of this genre.
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
4

Knight, Stephen. « Detection and Gender in Early Crime Fiction : Mrs Bucket to Lady Molly ». Crime Fiction Studies 3, no 2 (septembre 2022) : 89–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/cfs.2022.0068.

Texte intégral
Résumé :
Crime fiction is often mistakenly held to be based on books and male detection. In fact, in the nineteenth century periodicals were a major mode of publication and from the mid-century on women inquirers played a recurring role in the developing genre, while most early male detectives were, by later standards, distinctly under-gendered. Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal was a major early source; by the 1860s, female detectives were being created by male writers and in Bleak House (1852–53), Dickens gave Inspector Bucket’s wife distinct inquiring capacities. The major Australian author Mary Fortune – with more than four hundred stories in magazines over forty years from the 1860s – developed female inquirers over time. By the 1890s, professional English woman detectives were created, Loveday Brooke by C.L. Pirkis and Florence Cusack by L.T. Meade, while Baroness Orczy created as well as her best-selling ‘Scarlet Pimpernel’ the leading police detective Lady Molly, like the others first appearing in magazines.
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
5

Meyer, Neele. « Challenging Gender and Genre : Women in Contemporary Indian Crime Fiction in English ». Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik 66, no 1 (28 mars 2018) : 105–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/zaa-2018-0010.

Texte intégral
Résumé :
Abstract This paper looks at three Indian crime fiction series by women writers who employ different types of female detectives in contemporary India. The series will be discussed in the context of India’s economic growth and the emergence of a new middle class, which has an impact on India’s complex publishing market. I argue that the authors offer new identification figures while depicting a wide spectrum of female experiences within India’s contemporary urban middle class. In accordance with the characteristics of popular fiction, crime fiction offers the possibility to assume new roles within the familiar framework of a specific genre. Writers also partly modify the genre as a form of social criticism and use strategies such as the avoidance of closure. I conclude that the genre is of particular suitability for women in modern India as a testing-ground for new roles and a space that helps to depict and accommodate recent transformations that connect to processes of globalization.
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
6

Delafield, Catherine. « Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction : The Mothers of the Mystery Genre ». English Studies 94, no 2 (avril 2013) : 245–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0013838x.2013.765220.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
7

Fasselt, Rebecca. « Crossing genre boundaries : H. J. Golakai's Afropolitan chick-lit mysteries ». Feminist Theory 20, no 2 (25 février 2019) : 185–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464700119831538.

Texte intégral
Résumé :
Crime fiction by women writers across the globe has in recent years begun to explore the position of women detectives within post-feminist cultural contexts, moving away from the explicit refusal of the heterosexual romance plot in earlier feminist ‘hard-boiled’ fiction. In this article, I analyse Hawa Jande Golakai's The Lazarus Effect (2011) and The Score (2015) as part of the tradition of crime fiction by women writers in South Africa. Joining local crime writers such as Angela Makholwa, Golakai not only questions orthodox conceptions of gender and sexuality in traditional iterations of the crime novel, but also combines elements of chick-lit with the crime plot. Reading the archetypal quest structure of the two genres against the background of Sara Ahmed's cultural critique of happiness, I argue that Golakai inventively recasts the recent sub-genre of the chick-lit mystery from the perspective of an Afropolitan detective. Her detective tenaciously undercuts the future-directed happiness script that structures conventional chick-lit and detective novels with their respective focus on finding a fulfilling heterosexual, monogamous romantic relationship, and the resolution of the crime and restoration of order. In this way, the novels defy the frequently assumed apolitical nature of chick-lit texts and also allow us to reimagine the idea of Afropolitanism, outside of its dominant consumerist form, as a critical Afropolitanism that emerges from an openness to be affected by the unhappiness and suffering of others.
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
8

Ward, Ian. « Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Fiction : The Mothers of the Mystery Genreby Lucy Sussex, Palgrave Macmillan ». King's Law Journal 22, no 2 (juillet 2011) : 247–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.5235/096157611796769541.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
9

Rinaldi, Lucia. « Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction : The Mothers of the Mystery Genre. By Lucy Sussex ». European Legacy 17, no 3 (juin 2012) : 426. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10848770.2012.673362.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
10

Phegley, Jennifer. « Rev. of Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction : The Mothers of the Mystery Genre, by Lucy Sussex ». Victorians Institute Journal 40 (1 juillet 2012) : 189–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/victinstj.40.1.0189.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.

Thèses sur le sujet "Women detectives – Sweden – Fiction"

1

Carrasco, Katrina Marie. « Deepwater ». PDXScholar, 2015. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/2359.

Texte intégral
Résumé :
DEEPWATER is a novel that takes place in Port Townsend, Washington Territory, in 1887. This thesis contains the first sections of the novel, in which detective Alma Rosales goes undercover to infiltrate an opium-smuggling ring. She arrives in the remote outpost where the ring operates, falls in with some waterfront thieves, and gets to work. Soon it becomes apparent that Alma's reports to her Pinkerton employers aren't telling the whole truth. And as she gets cozier with the outlaws of Port Townsend, Alma's own identity and motives come into question. Thematically this novel is an exploration of constructed identity: the many parts one person plays in her daily life and over time, and how some parts become habit while others may never feel natural. Alma's disguises make explicit her various performances of personality, physicality and gender. Stylistically I've chosen to reflect Alma's personas, performed or otherwise, in corresponding narrative modes (points of view). Also explored are the performative aspects of dialogue, the blending or warping of genres and genre expectations, and the experience of inhabiting a physical body that is sometimes wildly at odds with the mind.
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
2

Dzirkalis, Anna M. « Investigating the female detective : gender paradoxes in popular British mystery fiction, 1864-1930 / ». View abstract, 2007. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:3287860.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.

Livres sur le sujet "Women detectives – Sweden – Fiction"

1

Tursten, Helene. Detective Inspector Huss. New York : Soho Press, 2003.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
2

Eriksson, Kjell. The hand that trembles : A mystery. New York : Minotaur Books, 2011.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
3

Eriksson, Kjell. The hand that trembles : A mystery. London : Allison & Busby, 2011.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
4

Eriksson, Kjell. The cruel stars of the night. New York : Minotaur, 2008., 2008.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
5

Frimansson, Inger. Island of the naked women. New York : Pleasure Boat Studio, 2009.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
6

Frimansson, Inger. Island of the naked women. New York : Pleasure Boat Studio, 2009.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
7

Frimansson, Inger. Island of the naked women. New York : Pleasure Boat Studio, 2009.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
8

Edwardson, Åke. The shadow woman : An Inspector Erik Winter novel. New York : Penguin Books, 2010.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
9

Tursten, Helene. The Golden Calf. New York, NY : SOHO Crime, 2013.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
10

Tursten, Helene. The beige man : An Inspector Irene Huss investigation set in Sweden. Waterville, Maine : Thorndike Press, A part of Gale, Cengage Learning, 2015.

Trouver le texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.

Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Women detectives – Sweden – Fiction"

1

Berglund, Birgitta. « Desires and Devices : On Women Detectives in Fiction ». Dans The Art of Detective Fiction, 138–52. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-62768-4_11.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
2

Sussex, Lucy. « Introduction : Look for the Women ». Dans Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction, 1–5. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289406_1.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
3

Sussex, Lucy. « ‘Origins are Multifarious and Unclean!’ : The Beginnings of Crime Fiction ». Dans Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction, 6–25. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289406_2.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
4

Sussex, Lucy. « The Art of Murder : Anna Katharine Green ». Dans Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction, 164–82. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289406_10.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
5

Sussex, Lucy. « Conclusion : ‘She Has Got a Murderess in Manuscript in her Bedroom’ ». Dans Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction, 183–85. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289406_11.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
6

Sussex, Lucy. « Mrs Radcliffe as Conan Doyle ? » Dans Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction, 26–44. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289406_3.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
7

Sussex, Lucy. « ‘A Most Preposterous Organ of Wonder’ : Catherine Crowe ». Dans Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction, 45–63. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289406_4.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
8

Sussex, Lucy. « ‘I’m a Thief-Taker, Young Lady’ ». Dans Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction, 64–80. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289406_5.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
9

Sussex, Lucy. « Getting Away with Murder : Mary Braddon ». Dans Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction, 81–100. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289406_6.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
10

Sussex, Lucy. « ‘Dead ! And … Never Called Me Mother’ : Ellen (Mrs Henry) Wood ». Dans Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction, 101–19. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289406_7.

Texte intégral
Styles APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
Nous offrons des réductions sur tous les plans premium pour les auteurs dont les œuvres sont incluses dans des sélections littéraires thématiques. Contactez-nous pour obtenir un code promo unique!

Vers la bibliographie