ENGL 204 A: Popular Fiction and Media

Winter 2025
Meeting:
MW 3:30pm - 5:20pm / LOW 102
SLN:
14394
Section Type:
Lecture
Instructor:
ADD CODES FROM INSTRUCTOR PD 3
Syllabus Description (from Canvas):

ENGL 204 A (Popular Fiction); w/ C LIT 252 A (Intro to Genres)

Professor Monika Kaup

 Metamorphoses of Detective Fiction from Poe to the Present (Course Title)

 Detective Fiction is one of the most popular types of genre fiction; at the same time, since its invention in the mid-19th century by Edgar Allan Poe, it has proven itself capable of combining entertainment with sharp-edged social commentary and critique as well as profound philosophical insights about language and representation. Created by Poe and perfected by Conan Doyle, detective fiction popularizes the modern scientific outlook (forensic science and the hypothetical–deductive method). The “clue puzzle” structure engages the reader’s own powers of detection and ratiocination, inviting the reader to emulate the detective and perform the same activities of mental reasoning. At the same time, detective fiction is also about the relationship between state authority and justice. In classic detective fiction, crime is a transgression of the norms of an essentially just system; the hard-boiled variety of detective fiction was born in the depression-era U.S. as disillusionment set in about the equation between justice and the state. The tough, disillusioned U.S. hardboiled detective who takes the law into his own hands and who uncovers crimes within the (corrupt) state in turn has inspired the creation of minority detectives—gumshoes of color. Chester Himes’ Cotton Comes to Harlem, for example, traces black-on-black crime in Harlem to structural racism. Finally, postmodern anti-detective fiction, invented by Jorge Luis Borges and perfected by Paul Auster, parodies the rationalist conventions of classic detective fiction, turning the machinery of retrospective clue puzzling inside-out. This course will survey the above-mentioned landmarks of the genre’s development from Poe to the present, as well as more recent Chicana (Corpi) incarnations that use the detective genre to explore U.S. minority history. Because detective fiction has also become a genre of world literature, our readings will end in Japan, with Akutagawa Ryunosuke’s 1922 murder mystery “In the Bamboo Grove,” which became world-famous as the basis for Kurosawa Akira’s film Rashomon. The course overall goal is to demonstrate how far one single genre defined by four ingredients (a mystery, a detective, an investigation, plus the “puzzle element”) can be stretched, and how much ground it can cover, including by global travel—while never ceasing to provide fun entertainment!

 

Required Readings:

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, A Study in Scarlet (Dover Thrift Edition);

Raymond Chandler, The Big Sleep (Random House/Vintage 1992);

Chester Himes, Cotton Comes to Harlem (Random House/Vintage 1988);

Lucha Corpi, Cactus Blood (Arte Público Press 2009);

Paul Auster, City of Glass (Penguin 1987);

                           and a small  course e-reader with primary and secondary readings

All texts are available at the UW Bookstore. I encourage you to buy the editions I’ve ordered because it will make exam preparations easier for you since we will be referring to these editions in class. (If you purchase digital editions and read them on your smart phone you are making it more difficult for yourself to follow lectures and discussion.)

 

Catalog Description:
Introduces students to the study of popular culture, possibly including print or visual media, understood as sites of critical reflection. Particular attention to dynamics of production and reception, aesthetics and technique, and cultural politics. Topics may foreground genres (science fiction; romance) or forms (comics; graffiti). Offered: S.
GE Requirements Met:
Arts and Humanities (A&H)
Writing (W)
Credits:
5.0
Status:
Active
Last updated:
November 21, 2024 - 3:33 pm