Southern noir is a genre of crime fiction set in the American South. It is considered a subgenre of noir fiction and often deals with themes related to poverty, racism, and violence.[1]
Southern noir is sometimes also called "rural noir", "country noir", or "grit lit".[2]
Characteristics
Southern noir is a subgenre of crime fiction, specifically noir fiction. It is typically written from the point of view of a character who is a perpetrator, victim, or investigator of a crime.[3] It is characterized by its focus on the setting of the American South, but can more broadly include the South, the Ozarks, Appalachia, the Midwest and the Southwestern United States.[4] It typically takes place in rural settings,[5] with vivid, poetic[6] descriptions of landscape and place.[1][7] These settings typically incorporate Southern Gothic aesthetics,[6] and explore elements of religion and the supernatural.[8][9][10]
Southern noir stories can take place in the present day or in the past.[4] The narratives and characters of Southern law are deeply affected by the socioeconomic issues facing the American South in the modern day, including the loss of family farms and factory jobs.[11] The failure of the American Dream in Southern noir leaves rural communities without outside assistance or hope.[12] Poverty, racism, alcoholism, drug addiction, intergenerational conflict, misogyny, sexual violence, and inequality are frequently explored.[13][14][15] Law enforcement are typically complicit in racist violence and Black characters face difficulty receiving justice.[16]
Protagonists in Southern noir fiction are often outsiders in their communities.[1] Characters are typically forced into situations that require them to navigate brutal violence and gray morality.[12][17][16]
History
Early examples of Southern noir include The Postman Always Rings Twice (1934) by James M. Cain,[18]Intruder in the Dust (1948) by William Faulkner, and Deliverance (1970) by James Dickey, each of which has been retroactively described as having characteristics common to the genre.[5] One of the first authors to use the term "country noir" was Daniel Woodrell, whose novel Give Us a Kiss was originally titled Give Us A Kiss: A Country Noir.[13] Woodrell later distanced himself from the term, saying that "The use of the term noir is too limiting. I didn’t realize that when I used Country Noir to describe my work, but the word noir is defined by so many ways by so many people that it is essentially useless as a descriptive terms".[19]
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