Crime Writing in Interwar Britain

£96.00

Crime Writing in Interwar Britain

Fact and Fiction in the Golden Age

Reportage, journalism or collected columns Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers Crime and criminology

Author: Victoria Stewart

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Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 24 August 2017

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 3 Mb

ISBN: 9781108293136


The interwar period is often described as the Golden Age of detective fiction

but many other kinds of crime writing, both factual and fictional, were also widely read during these years. Crime Writing in Interwar Britain: Fact and Fiction in the Golden Age considers some of this neglected material in order to provide a richer and more complex view of how crime and criminality were understood between the wars.

A number of the authors discussed, including Dorothy L. Sayers, Marie Belloc Lowndes and F. Tennyson Jesse, wrote about crime in essays, book reviews, newspaper articles and works of popular criminology, as well as in novels and short stories.

Placing debates about detective fiction in the context of this largely forgotten but rich and diverse culture of writing about crime will give a unique new picture of how criminality and the legal process were considered at this time.

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