Patricia Cornwell's "Unnatural Exposure" and the Representation of Space: Changing Patterns in Crime Fiction.(Critical Essay)

Clues: A Journal of Detection, September, 2000 by Messent, Peter

The representation of space, and particularly of city space, is of crucial importance in American hard-boiled detective fiction. In this article, I first map the normative relationship between the detective and that urban landscape which he or she inhabits, using the work of Walter Benjamin, Michel de Certeau and Steve Pile as my critical base. I then examine the Patricia Cornwell novel, Unnatural Exposure (1997), to illustrate how, in this particular contemporary crime novel, such relationships are subject to considerable alteration. The impact of sophisticated modes of detection associated with modern police practice, and in particular of computer technology, has meant a significant shift of paradigms in the way crime fiction works and the places in which it works. To...

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