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Not Afraid to Kill: The First Female Literary Detective in Bengali Crime Fiction

Shampa Roy (University of Delhi, India)

The Emerald International Handbook of Feminist Perspectives on Women’s Acts of Violence

ISBN: 978-1-80382-256-3, eISBN: 978-1-80382-255-6

Publication date: 2 August 2023

Abstract

While popular genre fictions like detective novels are often centred around formulaic plots and stereotypical characters, they also undergo several exciting changes when adapted in a diverse array of cultural and linguistic contexts. My chapter examines the first female detective of a Bangla crime writing series, Detective (Goyenda) Krishna as a figure that challenges patriarchal stereotypes related to violent women and dismantles the illusory neatness of binaries associated with ‘good’ and ‘bad’ femininity. The gun-toting, vengeance-seeking literary detective is also examined as mediating shifts and transitions in gendered practices and norms in Bengal – its socio-political as well as literary contexts – as it negotiated ideas of decoloniality from the first decade of the twentieth century and emerged as part of a new, partitioned nation in 1947. She is seen as a creative response to the changes related to gender that had been gradually taking shape in colonised Bengal and as articulating radically re-imagined possibilities and opportunities related to female subjectivities in a newly decolonised nation.

Keywords

Citation

Roy, S. (2023), "Not Afraid to Kill: The First Female Literary Detective in Bengali Crime Fiction", Banwel, S., Black, L., Cecil, D.K., Djamba, Y.K., Kimuna, S.R., Milne, E., Seal, L. and Tenkorang, E.Y. (Ed.) The Emerald International Handbook of Feminist Perspectives on Women’s Acts of Violence, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 419-432. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80382-255-620231028

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Shampa Roy. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited