The International Crime Genre Research Network, Ireland, presents the programme for its Sixth Interdisciplinary Conference



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Friday, 26th June




9:15-9:45 Registration (Plassey House)

9.45 -10:00 Opening of the Conference by Professor Tom Lodge,

Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Limerick



10:00-11:00 Keynote Address: Professor Evelyne Keitel (TU Chemnitz, Germany):
The Strange Case of the Nordic Detective: Realism, Regionalism, and Rewrites in Fargo

11:00-11:30 Coffee

11:30-13:00 Parallel Session 1
Cycles of Consumption (Board Room) Commodifying the Body (Wood Room)

Chair: Ellen Carter Chair: Andrea Hynynen



Deborah Walker-Morrison (University of Auckland, New Zealand): Consumption in Classic French gangster noir

Clare E. Rolens (University of California, San Diego, USA): The Homme Fatal Strikes Again: The Deadly Male as Criminal Consumer in Dorothy Hughes’s In a Lonely Place and Patricia Highsmith’s The Talented Mr. Ripley

Michael G. Kelly (University of Limerick): Economies of the Self. Restrained and Unrestrained Consumption in Simenon’s L’Affaire Saint-Fiacre

Melanie Graichen (TU Chemnitz, Germany): Crime and (Neo-Victorian) Consumption: Re-imagining the 19th Century in BBC’s Ripper Street

Dominique Jeannerod (Queen’s University Belfast): Crime Stories and Material forms: an intermedia circulation study

Katarina Gregersdotter (Umeå University, Sweden): “You could only sell a cow once, but you could milk it every day”: Human Trafficking in Contemporary Crime Fiction.



13:00-14:15 Lunch (Millstream Restaurant)

14:15-15:45 Parallel Session 2
Crime and Global Consumerism (Board Room) Food (Wood Room)

Chair: Michaela Schrage-Früh Chair: Linda Crawford



Patricia Plummer (University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany): Crime, Consumerism and the CSI-Effect

Eva Erdmann (Munich, Germany): Risky consumption in times of organic life (style). From the cocktail evening's secret spikings to food technology. Eating and drinking in crime fiction

Samantha Weyer-Brown (Paris 3 - Université Sorbonne Nouvelle): ‘Clean as a hound’s tooth’: greed, corruption and consumption in Alan Glynn’s Winterland

Barbara Pezzotti (Australasian Centre for Italian Studies (ACIS), New Zealand): Food as a Political Weapon in Inspector Montalbano Crime Series

Noel O'Shea (University of Limerick): Trading Vices: Globalising Crime in the Technology-Driven Financial Flux at the Centre of Michael Mann’s Miami Vice (2006)

Carolina Miranda (Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand): Eating out in Hardboiled Buenos Aires: Federico Levin’s Ceviche (2009)



15:45-16:15 Coffee/Tea
16:15-17:15 Parallel Session 3
Crime and Media (Board Room) Cannibalism (Wood Room)

Chair: Patricia Plummer Chair: Katarina Gregersdotter



Stefanie Jahn (TU Chemnitz, Germany): True Crime Narration in (the Age of) the Internet: Consuming the Podcast Serial

Jeffrey Halpern (Rider University, NJ, USA): Anthropophagy as Theophagy: Hannibal the Cannibal and the search for the Sacred

Simon James & Mariann Hardey (University of Durham, UK): Serial: This pod/cast consumptive life

Benjamin Schaab (University of Cologne, Germany) Killing in the Name of - Violence and Ideology in American Cinema around 1970



17.30-18.00 Welcome Reception & finger food (Plassey House)
18.00-19.00 Keynote Address: Professor Matthieu Letourneux (Université Paris Ouest):
Mysteries, series and consumption: serial dynamics in the inter-war years


Saturday, 27th June

10:00-11:00 Parallel Session 4
New Takes on Old Crime (Board Room) Food II (Wood Room)

Chair: Kerstin Bergman Chair: Eva Erdmann

Michele D'Angelo (Rider University, NJ, USA): Plays within Plays within Plays: Revisiting Shakespeare's 'Murder Most Foul' in the Age of Consumption.

Alison Atkins (Wake Forest University, NC, USA): Alimentary Consumption and the Violence of Artistic Creation in Manuel Vázquez Montalbán’s The Birds of Bangkok (1983)

Stefan Meier (TU Chemnitz, Germany): Franchising Sherlock: The Detective as Commodity

Ellen Risholm (University of Dortmund, Germany): The Meanderings of Consumption in Friedrich Dürrenmatt’s Detective Fiction



11:00-11:30 Coffee


11:30-13:30 Parallel Session 5
Selling Setting (Board Room) Critique of Capitalism (Wood Room)

Chair:Deborah Walker Chair: Jeffrey Halpern



Ellen Carter (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne): Criminal Consumption in and of the South Pacific

Joel Phillips (River University, NJ, USA): Greed and Redemption in Robert J. Sawyer’s Red Planet Blues

Julia Augart (University of Namibia): Exploitation as Consumerism. Social Criticism in German crime fiction set in Africa

Elizabeth Scheiber (River University, NJ, USA): The Commodification of the Authentic: Symbol and Mise en Abyme in Richard Price's Lush Life

Kerstin Bergman (Lund University, Sweden): Selling the Swedish Countryside: Commodification of the Rural in Recent Crime Novels

Linda Crawford (Salve Regina University, RI, USA): Private Guise: Socialist Detectives Thwarting Corporate Greed?

Andrea Hynynen (University of Turku, Finland): Sami traditions against financial interests in Olivier Truc’s and Lars Petterson’s crime novels

Andrew Pepper (Queen’s University Belfast): Capitalist Noir


13:30-14:45 Lunch (Plassey House)
14:45-16:15

Session 6: Irish Crime and the Celtic Tiger (Wood Room)
Chair: Andrew Pepper

Jane Rosenbaum (Rider University, NJ, USA): From Faithful Places to Broken Harbors: Tana French and the Crime Novel in the Wake of Eurozone Consumerism

Michaela Schrage-Früh (University of Limerick): Consumerism, Crime and Gender in Declan Hughes' The Wrong Kind of Blood and Niamh O'Connor's Taken

Kate Quinn (NUI Galway): Disintegrating Psyches, Madness and Follies in Declan Hughes, Niamh O’Connor and Alan Glynn


16:30-17:00 Coffee/Tea (Millstream Common Room)

17:00-18:00 Crime Writer Niamh O’Connor will read from and talk about her work (Millstream Common Room)

19:30 Conference Dinner (Azur, 8 George's Quay, Limerick City)
We gratefully acknowledge the support for the conference from

the Vice-President Academic and Registrar of the University of Limerick; the Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences, UL; the School of Modern Languages and Applied Linguistics, UL; the School of Culture and Communication, UL; the School of Languages, Literatures and Cultures, NUI Galway; and the Institute for Collaborative Research in the Humanities, Queen’s University Belfast



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