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The Non-Fiction Novel
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- About
- Transcript
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About the lecture
In this module, we think about the genre that In Cold Blood belongs to, a genre which Capote paradoxically referred to as 'the non-fiction novel'.
About the lecturer
Dr Christopher Pittard joined the University of Portsmouth in 2009, having held previous teaching positions at Newcastle University and the University of Exeter. His main research focus is on the popular culture of the nineteenth century, especially the emergence of popular genres in the Victorian fin de siecle and detective fiction in particular. His monograph, Purity and Contamination in Late Victorian Detective Fiction, considers how such fictions (and the periodicals in which they appeared) engaged with ideas of material and social purity, ranging from Sherlock Holmes cleaning the face of criminality in “The Man with the Twisted Lip” to the moral policing carried out by the Social Purity movements and late Victorian antivivisection campaigns. His publications in this area include discussions of Arthur Conan Doyle, Arthur Morrison, Fergus Hume, and of the Strand Magazine more widely.
Cite this Lecture
APA style
Pittard, C. (2018, August 15). Capote: In Cold Blood - The Non-Fiction Novel [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/capote-in-cold-blood?auth=0&lesson=1530&option=761&type=lesson
MLA style
Pittard, C. "Capote: In Cold Blood – The Non-Fiction Novel." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 15 Aug 2018, https://massolit.io/options/capote-in-cold-blood?auth=0&lesson=1530&option=761&type=lesson