This philosophical study of Latin American noir fiction poses the question, What if precarity and uncertainty aren’t just themes of the genre but ways of being in the world? Emerging from a region immersed in violence, trauma, and political instability, the novela negra reveals not just disillusionment but a desire to adapt to, even dwell within, chaos. In the hands of writers like Ricardo Piglia, Roberto Bolaño, and Patricia Melo, savvy detectives and antiheroes navigate a world in which meaning constantly shifts and certainty is elusive. Blending literary analysis with philosophical inquiry, Larson draws on Heideggerian ontology to demonstrate how the noir novel becomes a mode of existence—grounded in its very groundlessness. Rather than offering resolution, these novels embody a paradoxical desire: to engage crisis while also adapting to it. In doing so, they become both ideological and pedagogical—existential fiction for an uncertain world.
Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.
“Groundless Noir offers an innovative and exhaustive analysis of Latin American crime fiction. In an eloquent conversation with Heidegger, Larson takes the pulse of the genre’s multiple re-appropriations in the region. This lucid monograph reveals how the absence of an ontological ground—once a radical betrayal of the genre’s horizon of expectations that subverted the Anglo-American canon—has gradually and paradoxically established a new precarious, yet subsisting foundation.”
“According to Erik Larson, the contemporary Latin American novela negra features a detective who embraces the radical instability of the hard-boiled world as a new form of normality, skillfully navigating this ungrounded reality. In his book, Larson demonstrates the same mastery of this genre as the detective he describes.”
Note on Translations ix
Introduction: Worlds, Grounds, Coping, and Caring: Noir Attunement in the Latin American Novela Negra 1
1 World Literature, Postmodernism, and Tough-Call Decision-Making in En busca de Klingsor 25
2 Intertextual Afterimages: The Novela Negra Within a Global, Noir Mediascape 42
3 Virtual Realities, Real Phenomenologies: Being at Odds Through Ricardo Piglia 71
4 Lessons in Noir Economics: Piglia, Piñeiro, and Melo 89
5 Uncanny Inheritance, Thrownness, and the Weight of Legacy in Padilla’s Amphitryon 116
6 Of Sleuths and States: Literary Crime Fiction as Sovereign Act 132
Acknowledgments 149
Notes 151
Bibliography 173
Index 183
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