Skip to product information
Italian Crime Fiction Revisited

Italian Crime Fiction Revisited Authority, Detection, and the Supernatural, 1861–1941

Sale price  $107.99 Regular price  $119.99

Reliable shipping

Flexible returns

Italian and Italian American Studies

Italian Crime Fiction Revisited

Authority, Detection, and the Supernatural, 1861–1941

Stefano Serafini

Literary Criticism / European / General

This book offers the first extensive investigation of Italian crime fiction in the period between 1861, the year of Italy’s unification, and 1941, when the famous Mondadori series ‘I libri gialli’, which had published crime novels since 1929, was suppressed by the fascist regime. By exploring the formal and thematic metamorphoses of Italian crime narratives and probing the different socio-political roles that they played in both the liberal and fascist periods, it provides a radical re-conceptualization, in both historical and theoretical terms, of a form of fiction that has been largely marginalized for both aesthetic and ideological reasons, uncovering how it was implicated in the construction of the modern state and in the articulation and shaping of the process of ‘making Italians’.

Stefano Serafini is Marie Sklodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Padua, Italy, and Georgetown University, USA. He is the co-editor, with Marco Malvestio, of Italian Gothic: An Edinburgh Companion (2023) and the author of Gothic Italy: Crime, Science, and Literature after Unification, 1861–1914 (2024).


Publication Date: 31 January 2026
Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland
Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN-13: 9783031807381
Format: Paperback / softback
Page Count: 208

You may also like