"I Used to Be a Highbrow but Look at Me Now": Phrenology, Detection, and Cultural Hierarchy in S. S. Van Dine
This article reads Willard Huntington Wright's work against his anxieties about cultural hierarchy and value, utilizing archival work in Wright's papers at the University of Virginia and unearthing a previously unknown series of crime stories that he published under another pseudonym a decade before his success as bestselling detective novelist S. S. Van Dine. The author argues that Wright's work in popular fiction provides a special opportunity for interrogating the highbrow/lowbrow divide and its phrenological roots. This article originally appeared in Clues: A Journal of Detection, Volume 30, Issue 1.
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"I Used to Be a Highbrow but Look at Me Now": Phrenology, Detection, and Cultural Hierarchy in S. S. Van Dine
This article reads Willard Huntington Wright's work against his anxieties about cultural hierarchy and value, utilizing archival work in Wright's papers at the University of Virginia and unearthing a previously unknown series of crime stories that he published under another pseudonym a decade before his success as bestselling detective novelist S. S. Van Dine. The author argues that Wright's work in popular fiction provides a special opportunity for interrogating the highbrow/lowbrow divide and its phrenological roots. This article originally appeared in Clues: A Journal of Detection, Volume 30, Issue 1.
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"I Used to Be a Highbrow but Look at Me Now": Phrenology, Detection, and Cultural Hierarchy in S. S. Van Dine

by Brooks E. Hefner

"I Used to Be a Highbrow but Look at Me Now": Phrenology, Detection, and Cultural Hierarchy in S. S. Van Dine

by Brooks E. Hefner

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Overview

This article reads Willard Huntington Wright's work against his anxieties about cultural hierarchy and value, utilizing archival work in Wright's papers at the University of Virginia and unearthing a previously unknown series of crime stories that he published under another pseudonym a decade before his success as bestselling detective novelist S. S. Van Dine. The author argues that Wright's work in popular fiction provides a special opportunity for interrogating the highbrow/lowbrow divide and its phrenological roots. This article originally appeared in Clues: A Journal of Detection, Volume 30, Issue 1.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781476624808
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
Publication date: 11/02/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 12
File size: 4 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Brooks E. Hefner is assistant professor of English at James Madison University in Virginia. His research interests include modernist American literature, popular genres, and film history. His work has appeared in PMLA and MELUS, and he is working on the book manuscript Modernistic: The American Language of Vernacular Modernism.
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