John Dickson Carr’s Early Detective Novels and the Gothic Convention.

Joanna Kokot

Abstract


Even if the Gothic romance may be considered as one of the predecessors of detective fiction, the world model proposed by the latter seems to exclude what was the essence of the former: the irrational underlying the proposed world model. However, some of detective novel writers deploy Gothic conventions in their texts, thus questioning the rational order of the reality presented there. Such a genological syncretism is typical - among others - of the novels by John Dickson Carr. The paper is an analysis of Gothic conventions and their functions in four earliest novels by Carr, featuring a French detective-protagonist, Henri Bencolin. It concentrates on elements of Gothic horror, on the atmosphere of terror as well as the motif of the past intruding the present.


Keywords


Carr, John Dickson; detective fiction; Gothic fiction; Grand Guignol

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References


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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/lsmll.2019.43.2.61-74
Date of publication: 2019-07-03 11:00:36
Date of submission: 2018-07-04 13:23:20


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