Inspecting psychology : how the rise of psychological ideas influenced the development of detective fiction
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Inspecting psychology : how the rise of psychological ideas influenced the development of detective fiction
Routledge, 2022
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [137]-146) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
* Tracks the development of psychology as a discipline through the works of highly popular novelists: Wodehouse, Sayers and Christie.
* Provides psychological context for the development of plot and character.
Provides a unique view of the historical context in which Wodehouse, Sayers and Christie chose to include discourses of psychology.
* Examines the way three bestselleing novelists of the 20th century wrote about psychiatry, psychology and psychiatrists and links their interest in these to their lives and their crises, personal and intellectual.
Table of Contents
1. The first psychologies: from rock art to the association of ideas 2. Psychology, phrenology and psychiatry: the late 18th-19th centuries and the work of Edgar Allen Poe 3. The birth of modern psychology: 1879 and the significance of apparently unconnected events 4. Psychology and mystical experiences: the late 19th century and the work of William James and Conan Doyle, allies in the mystical 5. Puzzles, riddles and Gestalt theory: the early 20th century and the work of G.K. Chesterton 6. The First World War, mental illness and shell shock: the work of Rebecca West and the detective novels of the 1920s. 7. Freud, psychoanalysis and the psychology of Agatha Christie: the golden age of detective fiction 8. Individual psychology and the inferiority complex: Lord Peter Wimsey and the work of Dorothy Sayers 9. Theories of learning and the rise of behaviourism: the 1920s and the work of Anthony Berkeley, the innovator who seized up 10. Attachment theory and the work of John Bowlby: psychology between 1930 and 1945 and the novels of Gladys Mitchell 11. Psychoanalysis and psychiatry from 1930 to 1960: Georges Simenon and the intellectual egos of Sartre and Lacan 12. Curtains: contemporary psychology, pathology porn and the enduring link with detective fiction
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