INTERNATIONAL CRIME FICTION ASSOCIATION
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CAPTIVATING CRIMINALITY 12: CRIME FICTION AND THE GLOBAL CHALLENGES OF THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY


Monash University, Melbourne / Hybrid
25th - 27th June, 2025

CALL FOR PAPERS


Crime fiction has long since refuted the assumption that its socio-political engagement is  somehow not genuine – that it tends to reduce “social problems to so much local colour or authenticating detail” (John Sutherland). Nordic Noir, in particular, is often lauded for its  analysis of Scandinavian welfare and gender politics, yet the critical orientation is prominent  in contemporary world crime fiction more broadly. 

Using the nexus of crime and investigation as its lens, the genre is increasingly defined by  abandoning the idea of local and containable criminality in favour of a conception of individual crime as a manifestation of larger global challenges such as gender-based violence, economic  inequality, climate change, migration, Indigenous rights and the crisis of democracy. Given this  orientation towards the key challenges of our time, it is no exaggeration to say that world  crime fiction today, like the nineteenth-century realist novel according to Georg Brandes, is defined by its determination to “place problems under debate”.  

The conference will focus on crime fiction and the global challenges of the twenty-first  century. While this topic allows a new critical assessment of individual crime novels, it also  has broader ramifications for our understanding of the crime genre and its global distribution and impact. On the one hand, it enables an examination of how crime fiction’s socio-political engagement requires a revision of classic tropes, for example due to the emerging non individualistic conception of victimhood and culpability. On the other hand, it opens up  opportunities for a new comparative approach to crime fiction focusing on the ways in which  shared global issues are dealt with by authors in different countries and regions. 

Papers at the conference will examine the global socio-political engagement of crime fiction  from a broad range of perspectives, drawing on examples from across the world. We  particularly welcome abstracts dealing with one of the previously identified challenges and  offering comparative readings of literary texts from different countries and regions. We also  welcome papers that reinterpret earlier crime narratives in light of the genre’s contemporary  socio-political engagement. 


Topics may include, but are not limited to:  
• Crime fiction and the climate emergency 
• Crime fiction and the crisis of democracy 
• Crime fiction and economic inequality 
• Crime fiction and gender and sexual freedom 
• Crime fiction and migration 
• Crime fiction and war 
• Crime fiction and gender-based violence
• Crime fiction and global capitalism 
• Crime fiction and extractive economies 
​• Crime fiction and new forms of totalitarianism 
• Post-truth crime fiction  
• First Nations Crime fiction 
• Non-political crime fiction  
• Comparative perspectives on world crime fiction

Keynote Speakers

We're thrilled to announce our two keynote speakers and their (provisional) titles of their keynote addresses:

Prof. Sam Naidu 
(Rhodes University)

“Writing LGBTQ+ Rights into African Noir: Genre Activism and the Challenge of Increased Homophobia on the African Continent”

Prof. Jesper Gulddal 
(University of Newcastle)

“Global Indigenous Crime Fiction: A Comparative Attempt”

Extended Deadline

As this is a busy time of year, we're extending the deadline for submission of abstracts to the Crime Fiction and the Global Challenges of the Twenty-First Century conference from 15 December 2024 to 20 January 2025.

Please submit your 250-word abstracts for 20-minute presentations and proposals for panels and a short bio-note (about 100 words) via
 this form.
​
For postgraduate students and ECRs, a workshop will be held on 24 June before the conference proper begins. 

If you need an immediate response to apply for funding, please indicate this in your application form. 
​

​We look forward to receiving your abstracts.

With best wishes,

Stewart King (on behalf of the organising committee)

​Please address any questions to: 
[email protected].


Registration fees

​Online registration will be available from 1 February 2025.
Picture
Registration includes: in-person or online access to the conference sessions (including the ECR symposium). In addition, in-person registration includes: morning and afternoon tea, lunch and conference materials.

In-person registration: 
https://shop.monash.edu/captivating-criminality-12-in-person.html.
Online registration: https://shop.monash.edu/captivating-criminality-12-online.html.

Optional conference dinner and social events will be charged separately.

Delegates must be members of the International Crime Fiction Association for 2025 in order to attend this conference. To become an ICFA member, please pay your membership fee online at https://www.euppublishing.com/page/cfs/subscribe. Membership to the ICFA includes a subscription to Crime Fiction Studies. Should you have any special requests (invoicing, paying by bank transfer, etc.), please contact Edinburgh University Press directly at [email protected]. Please make sure you receive a transaction confirmation from EUP before you start the online registration for CapCrim12.
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  • Home
  • Meet the Team
    • Contact
  • Blog
  • Journal
  • Conferences
    • Captivating Criminality 13
    • Past Conferences >
      • 2025 Conference
      • 2024 Conference
      • 2023 Conference (Aug-Sept)
      • 2023 Conference (March)
      • 2022 Conference
      • 2021 Online November Event
      • 2020 Conference
      • 2019 Conference
      • 2018 Conference
      • 2017 Conference
      • 2016 Conferences
      • 2015 Conference
  • Book Prize
    • 2024 Prize
    • 2023 Prize
    • 2022 Prize
    • 2021 Prize
    • 2020 Prize
    • 2019 Prize
    • 2018 Prize
  • ECR/PGR Network
    • Meet the ECR/PGR Council
  • Join Us!