American Studies 105: Popular Culture and Folk Life:

ÒCrime Fiction and the Myth of ViolenceÓ

MWF 3:35 - 4:25

008 Mueller

Fall 2003

Dr. Jonathan P. Eburne                                                              Office Hours:

Office: 41 Scott Building                                                  Monday 10:00- 11:30

Email: jpe11@psu.edu                                                       Wednesday 10:00-11:30

Office Phone: 865-3945                                                  and by appointment

 

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This course asks us to consider the stakes of generating and ÒsolvingÓ mysteries.  To what extent can evidence, whether fingerprints, crime-scene photographs, or witness testimony, be used to detect and measure the truth?  To what extent does crime fiction perpetuate or challenge reigning myths about law and order, as well as the manners and codes of conduct they presume?  This course will study how the numerous forms of crime fiction and film of the past century and a half have attempted to understand the role of crime, punishment, and conduct in modern consciousness.  We will begin by examining the American crime storyÕs origins in the work of Edgar Allan Poe and Anne Katharine Green.  This basis will allow us to analyze the transformations the genre has undergone throughout its history, and to suggest how crime stories have engaged with major social and intellectual issues of their times. 

 

Required Texts:

Edgar Allan Poe, Selected Tales, Oxford

Anne Katharine Green, The Leavenworth Case, Indypublishing.com

Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Unpunished, The Feminist Press at CUNY

Dashiell Hammett, Red Harvest, Vintage

Crime Novels: American Noir of the 1930s and 40s, Library of America

Patricia Highsmith, Strangers on a Train, Norton

Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish, Vintage

Chester Himes, Cotton Comes to Harlem, Vintage

Walter Mosley, Devil in a Blue Dress, Washington Square Press

 

Syllabus, Additional Assigned Readings, and additional course information available through ANGEL: http://cms.psu.edu/