Institute of English Studies,12-13 June 2014
Keynote Speakers: Since the 1920s, women have been among the most prolific and influential authors of crime fiction. Some of the best-known heroes and anti-heroes of fiction are also women. From pioneers in the genre, such as Anna Katherine Green and the Baroness Orczy, through Golden Age queens of crime, like Agatha Christie (for whom the term was invented), Dorothy L. Sayers and Margery Allingham, to the innovators of the present day, including Sara Peretsky, Val McDermid, and Kate Atkinson, the female of the species has been more deadly than the male. This conference will address the relationship of gender and genre, past and present, and the known and the unknown. Many Queens of Crime are famous and much-studied, but their work continues to inspire fresh scholarship and novel perspectives. Others are continually in print but have not received equal academic attention. Some are too new in the field to have been thoroughly considered. Some have been unjustly forgotten. We welcome papers on thematic issues as well as those about individual writers and their creations. � What makes a Queen of Crime � Constructions of femininity and/or masculinity � Rewriting, revising, or re-appropriating the past Proposals for 20-minute papers or 60-minute panels. Please send a 300-word abstract to Jamie Bernthal and Brittain Bright at qoc2014@gmail.com by 14 February 2014. Check the event website for more information |