South African crime fiction : sleuthing the State post-1994

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Authors

Naidu, Samantha
Le Roux, Elizabeth

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Volume Title

Publisher

Routledge

Abstract

In this essay we demonstrate how the burgeoning field of South African crime fiction has responded to the birth and development of a democratic, post-apartheid South African state. First, an overview of South African crime fiction in the last twenty years is presented. Then the essay presents an argument for South African crime fiction to be regarded as the ‘new political novel’, based on its capacity for socio-political analysis. In the following section, the genre-snob debate and the resurgence of such terms as ‘lowbrow’ and ‘highbrow’ are considered in relation to crime fiction and the role it plays in the socio-cultural arena of post-apartheid South Africa. We conclude with a comment on the significance of popular literary genres for democracy and critical discourses which underpin that democracy. The essay shows that crime fiction is a strong tool for socio-political analysis in a democratic South Africa, because it promotes critical discourse in society, despite it being deemed lowbrow or ideologically ambiguous.

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Keywords

Crime fiction, South Africa (SA), Social analysis, Genre, Ideology

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Samantha Naidu & Elizabeth le Roux (2015): South African crime fiction:sleuthing the State post-1994, African Identities, vol. 12, nos. 3-4, pp. 283-294, DOI: 10.1080/14725843.2015.1009621 NYP.