Module Descriptors
CRIME SCENE AMERICA
ENGL60452
Key Facts
Faculty of Arts and Creative Technologies
Level 6
30 credits
Contact
Leader: Mark Brown
Hours of Study
Scheduled Learning and Teaching Activities: 72
Independent Study Hours: 228
Total Learning Hours: 300
Assessment
  • COURSEWORK -ESSAY weighted at 75%
  • CRITICAL ANALYSIS weighted at 25%
Module Details
Module Resources
DVD
Library

The Blackboard virtual learning environment will be available (where relevant) to support this module. Details will be supplied in the module handbook.
Module Learning Strategies
2 hour seminar with tutor-led group discussion. Students will be expected to prepare for classes by reading of both the primary and set secondary reading.

Key Information Set Data:
8% scheduled learning and teaching activities
92% guided independent learning
Module Indicative Content
This module will trace the development of crime and detective fiction in the US from the seminal work of Poe in the nineteenth century up to the present day. The novels and film are arranged chronologically and classes will focus on socio-historical contexts, the treatment and 'policing' of social anxieties, the maintenance of established political and economic orders, the representations of the detective and the criminal, literary movements and styles and the application of key critical contexts such as class, gender and sexuality, and race.

Edgar Allan Poe, 'The Murders in the Rue Morgue' (1841)
Raymond Chandler, The Big Sleep (1939)
Truman Capote, In Cold Blood (1966)
Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy (1987)
Walter Mosley, Devil in a Blue Dress (1990)
Julie Anne Robinson (dir), One for the Money (2012) - adapted from the novel by Janet Evanovich (1994)
Module Additional Assessment Details
2000 word Critical Analysis 25% (LO 5)
4000 word Essay 75% (LOs 1-4)

Key Information Set Data:
100% coursework
Module Texts
Jarvis B. (2004): Cruel and Unusual. London: Pluto
Knight S.(2004): Crime Fiction, 1800-2000: Detection, Death, Diversity. Basingstoke : Palgrave Macmillan
Porter D. (1981): The Pursuit of Crime. New Haven:Yale
Priestman M (1998): Crime Fiction: From Poe to the Present. Plymouth: Northcote House
Symons J. (1972): Bloody Murder. London: Faber and Faber