ABSTRACT

Recent years have witnessed important new initiatives in the study of popular fictional modes of writing. At one time the field could have been described with reasonable accuracy by two traditions: one that analyzed the production and distribution of popular fiction as commodities; and one whose proponents regarded popular fiction as the negative which offered definition to the exposure of the positive - the ‘great’ canonic literary tradition. Generally, then, popular fictions were to be ‘evaluated’ according to the institutionalized norms which had been established as common sense practice around literary studies.

The decade of the 1970s, however ushered in a bewildering range of theoretical debates - a crucial gain was establishment of interdisciplinary courses in communication, cultural and media studies, providing a network of contexts within which serious analysis could evolve and progress. Responding to a fundamental challenge from feminism, a primary objective of this book is to propose that all narrative and its reading are intrinsically inflected by sexual politics.

Various approaches represented here demonstrate problems of confronting the gendered pleasures of reading. Questions about self, sexuality and identity within specific historical formations are raised. The objective is to frame, describe and unearth the notion of ‘men as readers’ as a project rather than as the usual, unquestioned normative procedure.

Drawing eclectically upon Marxist, psychoanalytic and discourse theory, the essays set out readings of popular texts and genres – the Western, the sentimental novel, detective and crime fiction, political thrillers and horror and science fiction – in the interest of provoking other readers to see the critical study of popular fiction as unthinkable without gender as a central concern.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |20 pages

The Political Unconscious in the Maternal Melodrama

Ellen Wood's East Lynne (1861)

chapter |16 pages

Sherlock Holmes

Adventures of an English Gentleman 1887–1894

chapter |17 pages

The Stuff that Dreams are Made of

Masculinity, Femininity and the Thriller

chapter |16 pages

Rewriting the Masculine Script

The Novels of Joseph Hansen

chapter |18 pages

The Divided Gaze

Reflections on the Political Thriller

chapter |21 pages

Gorky Park

American Dreams in Siberia

chapter |21 pages

Science Fiction

The Dreams of Men