Showing posts with label crime fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Reconsidering Crime Fiction II - a response to CK

On the contrary I think crime fiction is alive and well ,perhaps not in the hard-boiled tradition of Raymond Chandler or Dashiell Hammett but as some of us discussed in class, we all grew up on 'detective' fiction -- Nancy Drew, Hardy Boys, Famous Five (and other Blyton numerical variations), Three Investigators, not to mention Poirot, Miss Marple, Sherlock, Ellery Queen and dare I say, Scooby-Doo. It can be argued that The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night which is an O level text is a 'detective' novel as well.

In terms of movies, a new Sherlock movie is coming up. Even then, the persistent popularity of cop movies reflects our interest in crime and social deviancy, particularly our fascination with the psyche of the serial killer. Most critics trace this back to Silence of the Lambs winning the Academy Award but obviously, detective movies of the 1940s and 1950s had much earlier established the visual style of film noir. “The hallmark of the film noir is its sense of people trapped – trapped in webs of paranoia and fear, unable to tell guilt from innocence, true identity from false” [Sklar 253]. Deeply influenced by German Expressionism, the mood, themes, tone and characterization of film noir, literally “black film”, express a pessimistic worldview of moral ambivalence, criminal complicity, erotic deception and psychotic disturbance. Grunenberg observes that this “obsession with sex, crime and the proclivities of twisted yet clever serial killers has developed into one of the most popular categories in mainstream entertainment” (Grunenberg 210). Prime examples of this if you are interested in catching a good movie this weekend would include Se7en, The Usual Suspects and Sin City.

So perhaps it is not as criminal to read crime fiction as it appears ... depending on how you define crime. :)

D

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

On reconsidering Crime Fiction

A friend argued with me that Crime Fiction would always be a second-class citizen to other more “serious” or “literary” fiction because it is formulaic and repetitive. “There is no character growth in this story, unlike those characters in the classics” he argued. “There can’t be any depth in these books because the authors are more interested in making money, and thus prolonging the franchise of a successful character. There is not much literary merits in these books.”

I don’t want to comment on the fallacies in this high-brow argument because I was once someone who believed in the same logic, who fastidiously read Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick to impress, feigning interests in a genre that did not appeal to me at all. It was after two years of working in the corporate world that I decided to pick up a crime novel again, partly to distract myself from reality, and to car-chase criminals on a busy American street again.

How wrong I was that it would distract me from the reality. Crime fiction, though focusing on crime as the genre suggests, is sometimes more realistic than some realist fictions. This is a group of writers who pay attention to tension between class, families, communities and individuals more readily, and who do not hesitate to expose and expostulate these tensions in the realm of crime.

“Personal is political”, or so proclaimed the feminist scholars in the late sixties and seventies. In that sense, criminal is also political. How does a crime happen? There should be a motive behind every single instance of crime, be it money, love, or mental issues. Even crimes of passion have motives – which is passion, in every sense of the word. However, these motives allow us to see a bigger social picture.

It is no longer a case of middle-class people trying to find their identities, or fighting for soul survival. It is hard-boiled survival. It’s about people working on the street, taking grimy jobs to earn a small paycheck. It’s about you and me, or the neighbour who stays next door, who is struggling day-to-day to make ends meet, who is wiling to do anything within his/her means to provide hot food on the table, and good education for their children.

Crime writers are more concerned about these individuals. The cynicism that these writers are writing for money must be left at the doorstep the moment we open the novel. Not many writers bother to give a voice to lower-middle class citizens. We should appreciate what the crime writers are doing for people of that socio-economic strata.

We must examine beyond the motives of these crimes. How is it possible that a desire for fame and success propels someone to kill? Does that inform us of any prevalent ideology in that particular community or society? How does that compare to the society that we live in now?

If the narrator is a first-person, then we have to ask even more questions. In the case of Christie’s The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, the first-person narrative becomes a point for contention. What is the degree of reliability of the narrator? Is the narrator showing a just account? If not, what is the narrator trying to hide or inform us? Is the narrator’s view representative of his society? How is his view different from ours?

There are so many ways to read, access and teach crime fiction. Let’s pay a bit more attention to this genre if we can.

Regards,
Chee Kam