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Genre Reassignment: Crime, Morality, and Elmore Leonard's Place in Law and Literature

Posted on:2013-01-04Degree:M.AType:Thesis
University:Arizona State UniversityCandidate:Weier, NicholasFull Text:PDF
GTID:2455390008963609Subject:Law
Abstract/Summary:
For over a century, writings in the Law & Literature genre have been largely restricted to works concerning lawyers and courtrooms. This despite early preeminent Law& Literature scholars' assertions that the genre should incorporate any writing that examines the intersection of law, crime, morality, and society. For over a half-century, Detroit novelist Elmore Leonard has been producing well-written, introspective novels about criminals, violence, and society's need to both understand and condemn these things, all under the broad, oft-marginalized genre of crime and detective fiction. This paper pairs the work of Elmore Leonard, using his successful novel Out of Sight as a stylistic framework, with the Law & Literature genre. After a dissection of the true definition of a Law & Literature and detective fiction, as well as an excavation of underlying themes and imports of Out of Sight, it is found that Law & Literature scholars need to be more inclusive of crime novels like Leonard's. And, given the characteristics of both genres, Leonard's novels are more appropriately classified as Law & Literature rather than detective fiction.
Keywords/Search Tags:Law, Literature, Genre, Leonard's, Detective fiction, Crime, Elmore
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