This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services

Edinburgh University Press

Home Edinburgh University Press 22 FROM THE DOOMED DETECTIVE
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

22 FROM THE DOOMED DETECTIVE

  • Stephano Tani
© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS iii
  3. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vi
  4. INTRODUCTION: WHAT WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT POSTMODERNISM 1
  5. PART I THE POSTMODERN CONDITION
  6. INTRODUCTION 11
  7. MAPPING POSTMODERNISM
  8. 1 THE CULTURAL LOGIC OF LATE CAPITALISM’ 20
  9. 2 ‘TIME-SPACE COMPRESSION AND THE POSTMODERN CONDITION’ 40
  10. 3 ‘MAPPING THE POSTMODERN’ 59
  11. NARRATIVE, KNOWLEDGE, REPRESENTATION
  12. 4 FROM THE POSTMODERN CONDITION: A REPORT ON KNOWLEDGE 72
  13. 5 THE PRECESSION OF SIMULACRA’ 91
  14. IRONY AND ‘DOUBLE CODING’ 6 ‘POSTMODERNISM, IRONY, THE ENJOYABLE’
  15. 6 ‘POSTMODERNISM, IRONY, THE ENJOYABLE’ 110
  16. 7 ‘POST-MODERNISM DEFINED’ 113
  17. DIAGNOSING POSTMODERNISM
  18. 8 ‘YOU MAY!’ 121
  19. PART II THE POSTMODERN TU RN
  20. INTRODUCTION 131
  21. 9 THE LITERATURE OF EXHAUSTION’ 138
  22. 10 ‘MASS SOCIETY AND POSTMODERN FICTION’ 148
  23. 11 ‘ONE CULTURE AND THE NEW SENSIBILITY’ 153
  24. 12 ‘CROSS THE BORDER - CLOSE THAT GAP: POST-MODERNISM’ 162
  25. 13 THE DETECTIVE AND THE BOUNDARY: SOME NOTES ON THE POSTMODERN LITERARY IMAGINATION’ 169
  26. 14 ‘POSTmodernISM: A PARACRITICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY’ 186
  27. 15 THE MYTH OF THE POSTMODERN BREAKTHROUGH’ 207
  28. PART III POSTMODERN POETICS
  29. INTRODUCTION 217
  30. THE NOVEL
  31. 16 FROM S/Z 226
  32. 17 FROM ‘DISCOURSE IN THE NOVEL’ 231
  33. 18 FROM METAFICTION 239
  34. TOWARDS A POETICS OF POSTMODERN FICTION
  35. 19 ‘POSTMODERNIST FICTION’ 250
  36. 20 ‘CHANGE OF DOMINANT FROM MODERNIST TO POSTMODERNIST WRITING’ 278
  37. 21 FROM A POETICS OF POSTMODERNISM 301
  38. POSTMODERN GENRE
  39. 22 FROM THE DOOMED DETECTIVE 320
  40. PART IV POSTMODERN POLITICS
  41. INTRODUCTION 329
  42. POLITICS AND FICTIONALITY
  43. 23 FROM THE POLITICS OF POSTMODERNISM 339
  44. 24 TH E ETHICS OF ALTERITY’ 355
  45. 25 FROM DISSIDENT POSTMODERNISTS 371
  46. FEMINISM AND POSTMODERNISM
  47. 26 ‘FEMINISM, READING, POSTMODERNISM’ 390
  48. 27 ‘A MANIFESTO FOR CYBORGS: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND SOCIALIST FEMINISM IN THE 1980s’ 396
  49. IS THE ‘POST’ IN POSTCOLONIAL THE SAME AS THE ‘POST’ IN POSTMODERN?
  50. 28 ‘POSTMODERN BLACKNESS’ 421
  51. 29 THE POSTCOLONIAL AND THE POSTMODERN’ 429
  52. TECHNOLOGY AND PARANOIA
  53. 30 ‘CYBERNETIC DECONSTRUCTIONS: CYBERPUNK AND POSTMODERNISM’ 446
  54. 31 ‘ENGENDERING PARANOIA IN CONTEMPORARY NARRATIVE’ 463
  55. NAMES INDEX 479
  56. SUBJECT INDEX 486
Postmodernism and the Contemporary Novel
This chapter is in the book Postmodernism and the Contemporary Novel
Downloaded on 15.3.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781474471312-027/html
Scroll to top button