2019-02-25T10:53:54Z
2019-02-25T10:53:54Z
2016-12
2019-02-25T10:53:54Z
Jamaican writer Marlon James's third novel, A Brief History of Seven Killings, for which he won the prestigious Man Booker Prize in 2015, is a crime novel which looks beyond the surface to explore and unearth suppressed histories. The genre itself, crime fiction, has proven to be prosperous ground to undertake such explorations. In Twentieth-Century Crime Fiction, Lee Horsley asserts that simply "the act of looking at what has been hidden is in itself fraught with meaning" (2005: 203) and he further specifies that the detective or crime story is "an ideal form of exploration of suppressed realities. The investigative structure provides a ready-made instrument for unearthing the previously invisible crimes against people" (id.). In fact, James himself has described his novel as the act of the pulling off a stitch that might "disrupt the whole fabric" (James 2015).
Artículo
Versión publicada
Inglés
Literatura; Escriptors jamaicans; Literature; Jamaican authors
Centre d'Estudis Australians, Universitat de Barcelona
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1344/co2016/.20.94-97
Coolabah, 2016, num. 20, p. 94-97
https://doi.org/10.1344/co2016/.20.94-97
cc-by (c) Grau Perejoan, Maria, 2016
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es