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Fictions for representing and generating semiotic consciousness: the crime story and educational inquiry

Version 2 2024-06-16, 13:38
Version 1 2002-01-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-16, 13:38 authored by N Gough
This essay appraises the work of fiction in representing and generating semiotic consciousness in education by examining three intertextual continuities between crime fiction and stories of educational inquiry. First, many reports of educational research resemble detective stories in their quests to determine the (or a) “truth” about something that is problematic or puzzling and this essay describes some of the ways in which the characteristic investigatory methods of fictional detectives resemble forms of educational inquiry. Second, the characteristic ways in which detective stories generate interpretations are compared with the textual strategies deployed in producing meanings and narratives in educational inquiry. Third, recent transformations of both detective fiction and educational inquiry are shown to be comparable — and intertextually linked — manifestations of cultural and semiotic shifts associated with postmodernity. I conclude by suggesting that authors of “anti-detective” crime fiction might provide more appropriate models of educational inquiry than do fictional detectives.<br>

History

Location

Madison, WI

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

International journal of applied semiotics

Volume

3

Pagination

59-76

ISSN

1488-0733

Issue

2

Publisher

Atwood Publishing

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