Skip to main content
crime-scene-tape

As part of The Conversation’s Uncommon Courses series, Sally Harris, Distinguished Lecturer of English, discusses her course Whodunit?: Detective Stories.

What prompted the idea for the course? I had just finished reading one of Dorothy Sayers’ novels – “Gaudy Night,” which in my opinion is one of the best of her detective novels featuring Harriet Vane and Lord Peter Wimsey. A colleague and I were discussing Harriet’s ability to delve into the secrets of a women’s college at Oxford when it occurred to me that I would have loved a detective fiction class as an undergraduate.

Although professors throughout my studies enjoyed talking about detective stories, I had never heard of any class devoted exclusively to studying them. So when the English department where I teach asked for proposals for new courses, I submitted one. It also seemed like a good way to connect with students. They could become literary detectives – reading closely, finding clues, forming theories. It also gave me the chance to research and teach stories I’ve enjoyed for years.

Read the full article at The Conversation.

UT is a member of The Conversation, an independent source for news articles and informed analysis written by the academic community and edited by journalists for the general public. Through this partnership, we seek to provide a better understanding of the important work of our researchers. Read more of our articles published by The Conversation on the UT news site.

TheConversation_logo-1.jpg-1

MEDIA CONTACT:

Cindi King (865-974-0937, cking126@utk.edu)