Re-reading Noir: American Women’s Cold-War Crime Fiction and The Resisting Reader

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Erin Smith
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

abstract:This article considers Judith Fetterley’s The Resisting Reader in relation to the author’s current research on Cold-War American women’s crime fiction. The dominant critical framework about this fiction from the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s is noir, a masculinist genre about male loners / outsiders that often embraces a cynical or nihilistic worldview. Many of these books objectify women and feature a spider woman or femme fatale, who is punished for her pursuit of self-interest and use of her sexuality to attain power. The lesser-known female crime writers of the period were–in many ways–resisting readers of this tradition. Their re-readings and rewritings often privileged community and connection over isolation and offered more complicated female characters. The author uses the case of Charlotte Armstrong’s A Dram of Poison (1956) to make this case.
重读黑色:美国女性的冷战犯罪小说与抗拒的读者
本文将朱迪思·费特利的《抗拒的读者》与作者目前对冷战时期美国女性犯罪小说的研究联系起来。在20世纪40年代、50年代和60年代,对这部小说的主要批评框架是黑色小说,这是一种男性主义流派,讲述的是男性孤独者/局外人,往往包含一种愤世嫉俗或虚无主义的世界观。这些书中有许多物化了女性,并刻画了一个蜘蛛女或蛇蝎美人,她因为追求自我利益和利用性来获得权力而受到惩罚。这一时期不太知名的女性犯罪作家在很多方面都抵制这种传统的读者。她们的重读和重写往往将社区和联系置于孤立之上,并提供了更复杂的女性角色。作者以夏洛蒂·阿姆斯特朗的《一杯毒药》(1956)为例来说明这一点。
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来源期刊
Reception-Texts Readers Audiences History
Reception-Texts Readers Audiences History HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Reception: Texts, Readers, Audiences, History is a scholarly, peer-reviewed journal published once a year. It seeks to promote dialog and discussion among scholars engaged in theoretical and practical analyses in several related fields: reader-response criticism and pedagogy, reception study, history of reading and the book, audience and communication studies, institutional studies and histories, as well as interpretive strategies related to feminism, race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and postcolonial studies, focusing mainly but not exclusively on the literature, culture, and media of England and the United States.
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