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[Commlist] CFA: The Palgrave Handbook of European Crime Narratives
Wed Oct 09 12:05:49 GMT 2019
Call for abstracts
*The Palgrave Handbook of European Crime Narratives*
Editors: Cathrin Bengesser, Pia Majbritt Jensen and Kim Toft Hansen
Although a widely popular genre for over a century, crime narratives are
experiencing an unprecedented popularity all across Europe and across
different media at the moment. In literature, film and television, crime
and violence are a central source of inspiration for narratives about
national/regional societies and cultures as well as inspiration for
stories and creative processes that transcend the borders between
countries and media. More than any other narrative genre, the crime
genre has proven able to travel across the European continent and
beyond, becoming a vehicle for cultural exchange and debate.
Besides evoking transborder cultural exchange, crime narratives are
today a strategic means in European place-branding on local, national,
regional and transnational levels of communication. As a result, the
generic concept “noir” now resonates among producers, distributors and
audiences of crime fiction, and increasingly EURONOIR narratives have
been located in recognizable places and regions across Europe, resulting
in e.g. Mediterranean, Tartan, Catalan, Nordic Noir.
This *Handbook* will cover this vast field of crime narratives in film,
literature and television, including cross-media narratives such as
adaptations. The volume seeks to extend the knowledge of European crime
narratives and, at the same time, introduce and revise contemporary
theoretical assumptions about and methodological approaches to crime
narratives. The overall concept of the book is to explicate the
researchers’ theoretical and methodological perspectives on crime
narratives and to exemplify these approaches with an original analysis.
Objects of research can be contemporary or reaching back historically.
For the volume, we seek contributions for *four sections *on crime
narratives: 1) literary crime fiction, 2) crime films, 3) television
crime narratives, 4) trans-/cross-mediated crime narratives.
Within these four sections we will include an equal amount of chapters
within the following *five organizational principles*: a)
production/distribution/audience/content, b) a wide European
geographical coverage, c) different theoretical and methodological
background, d) historical and contemporary cases, and e) especially how
the chapter’s case study engages in *overall European perspectives*.
When sending in abstracts, please accentuate how your chapter fits into
the sections of the book (1-4) and the organization principles (a-e).
Please, include an 300 word abstract and a 150 word bio. Send your
abstracts to (cbengesser /at/ cc.au.dk) <mailto:(cbengesser /at/ cc.au.dk)>,
(piamj /at/ cc.au.dk) <mailto:(piamj /at/ cc.au.dk)>and (kimtoft /at/ cgs.aau.dk)
<mailto:(kimtoft /at/ cgs.aau.dk)>no later than *15 November 2019*. We expect
publication in early 2021.
At the moment, we are negotiating with Palgrave Macmillan and the final
volume proposal will include a general introduction to the edited volume
as well as the approved abstracts. The handbook will consist of around
25 contributions.
The volume is part of research conducted within the H2020-funded
research project DETECt (Detecting Transcultural Identity in European
Popular Crime Narratives) (2018-21). Please, visit the following website
for more information: http://www.detect-project.eu/.
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