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Resisting Arrest: Detective Fiction and Popular Culture (Cultural Studies Series) [Paperback]

Robert A. Rushing (Author), Samir Dayal (Series Editor)

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Book Description

May 17, 2007 Cultural Studies Series
An innovative and entertaining look at genre, popular culture, enjoyment, and psychoanalysis.

Detective fiction, a category that, broadly defined, runs the gamut from Oedipus Rex to "The Purloined Letter," continues to draw a range of fans and scholars, and to play a pivotal role in popular entertainment, contemporary literature, and psychoanalytic theory. But how do we derive pleasure from reading about or watching a detective's exploits? Is our enjoyment in the vicarious experience of genius? Or in witnessing the commission of a crime, an equally vicarious experience of violence?

Resisting Arrest looks at the detective genre in its many different cultural manifestations, from popular fiction (Christie) to high literature (Eco), from art films (Antonioni) to popular television series (Monk). In each case, Rushing finds that detective stories have less to do with fulfilling our hidden desires, as psychoanalytic explanations have traditionally asserted, than with purposively thwarting them. He argues that the genre is in fact constituted principally by the promises on which it fails to deliver, including the vicarious experience of both genius (readers expecting to play Sherlock Holmes are almost always cast as Watson) and antisocial violence, so that our pleasure is based on what Slavoj Zizek has called "the endless circulation around the always-missed object." Organized around the key ideas that structure the detective genre ("Desire," "Repetition," "Violence"), Resisting Arrest offers a thoroughly new interpretation that will appeal to scholars interested in questions about genre and cinema studies, popular culture, and psychoanalysis.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

An elegant and original reading of detective fiction and film through Lacan and Zizek, written in a lucid, accessible style. -- E. Ann Kaplan, Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies, Stony Brook University

The definitive account of detective fiction.... what's more, a thoroughgoing rethinking of psychoanalytic concepts, of cultural history, and of narrative. -- Todd McGowan, author of The Real Gaze: Film Theory after Lacan

About the Author

Robert A. Rushing, Ph.D., UC Berkeley, is Assistant Professor of Italian & Comparative Literature at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, where he is also affiliated with the Unit for Cinema Studies and the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory.

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More About the Author

Rob Rushing is associate professor of Italian and Comparative Literature at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, where he holds affiliate appointments with Cinema Studies and the European Union Center, and is a member of the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory. He has a B.A. in Literature and Philosophy from U.C. Santa Cruz, a Masters in Comparative Literature from Michigan, and a Ph.D. in Italian from U.C. Berkeley. Professionally, Rushing works predominantly on 20th and 21st century literature and popular culture in Italian, English, French and Spanish; his research interests include modern Italian literature; film studies; critical theory, especially psychoanalysis; comparative literary studies; and genre. Less professionally, he maintains an active interest in science--particularly cognitive science, evolutionary psychology, and evolutionary theory--and music. Rushing is the author of Resisting Arrest: Detective Fiction and Popular Culture (New York: Other Press, 2007). His articles and reviews have appeared in Camera Obscura, Yale French Studies, Comparative Literature, MLN, American Literary History, and American Imago, the only American academic journal founded by Freud. He is currently at work on a book on the Italian writer Italo Calvino.

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