| Literature DB >> 23766552 |
Abstract
This article explores the articulation of the crime scene as a distinct space of theory and practice in the early twentieth century. In particular it focuses on the evidentiary hopes invested in what would at first seem an unpromising forensic object: dust. Ubiquitous and, to the uninitiated, characterless, dust nevertheless featured as an exemplary object of cutting-edge forensic analysis in two contemporary domains: writings of criminologists and works of detective fiction. The article considers how in these texts dust came to mark the furthest reach of a new forensic capacity they were promoting, one that drew freely upon the imagination to invest crime scene traces with meaning.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23766552 PMCID: PMC3678505 DOI: 10.1525/rep.2013.121.1.31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Representations (Berkeley) ISSN: 0734-6018