French and American noir : dark crossings / Alistair Rolls and Deborah Walker.

There is a longstanding misconception surrounding the term French noir, according to which the post-war French thriller and film noir were merely a development of, or response to, a pre-existing American tradition. This book aims to challenge this understanding of French noir, at once examining the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rolls, Alistair, 1971- (Author), Walker-Morrison, Deborah (Author)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Basingstoke [England] ; New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, 2009.
Series:Crime files series.
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Online Access:Click for online access
Description
Summary:There is a longstanding misconception surrounding the term French noir, according to which the post-war French thriller and film noir were merely a development of, or response to, a pre-existing American tradition. This book aims to challenge this understanding of French noir, at once examining the complexity of this transatlantic exchange and refocusing debate to include a Franco-French lineage, especially in the case of French noir fiction. The result is a study of a 'genre' whose tendency is towards reflexivity and self parody. Where noir is keenly conscious of its own narrative structure, French noir is a celebration of its own French ancestry. Baudelaire is not simply a pioneer or forefather; instead, he lives on in twentieth-century French noir as a prose poetics. Sartre's Existentialism is not merely an accompanying philosophy to noir's mean streets but a crucial intertext, as relevant to the fiction and cinema of the 1990s and beyond as to the thrillers of the immediate post-war years. With French and American Noir, Rolls and Walker hope to put the French back into French noir.
Physical Description:1 online resource (ix, 229 pages)
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 200-221) and index.
ISBN:9780230244825
0230244823
1349358657
9781349358656
Source of Description, Etc. Note:Print version record.