Book contents
- Victorian Automata
- Victorian Automata
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction
- An Afterthought on Victorian Automata as Afterthought (and Signifier)
- Part I Mechanical Automata
- Part II Automatism
- Part III Literary Genre and Popular Fiction
- Chapter 9 The Automaton Detective
- Chapter 10 “A Doll, a Dummy, a Nothing!”
- Chapter 11 The Invasion of the White Mind
- Part IV Interactions
- Index
Chapter 9 - The Automaton Detective
Victorian Reverberations
from Part III - Literary Genre and Popular Fiction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2024
- Victorian Automata
- Victorian Automata
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction
- An Afterthought on Victorian Automata as Afterthought (and Signifier)
- Part I Mechanical Automata
- Part II Automatism
- Part III Literary Genre and Popular Fiction
- Chapter 9 The Automaton Detective
- Chapter 10 “A Doll, a Dummy, a Nothing!”
- Chapter 11 The Invasion of the White Mind
- Part IV Interactions
- Index
Summary
Early detective fiction’s anxious obsession with constructing a respectable canonical lineage ensured that texts in the genre are typically both explicit and repetitive in their intertextual referencing, and early detective fiction stories tend to link themselves back to a fairly limited set of precursor texts and tropes. This chapter argues that the automaton became one of detective fiction’s central recurring symbols in the Victorian period, a contested figure lying at the heart of a struggle over the genre and the worldview that it contained.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Victorian AutomataMechanism and Agency in the Nineteenth Century, pp. 195 - 207Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024