Biography clip
Links to the full Biography program about Poe: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5
(The detective clip comes from Part 3)
Search Amazon.com for Edgar Allan Poe's detective stories
This is a blog about my teaching, research and service with some occasional personal comments thrown in.
These are my notes on a variety of topics. If you want to follow my blog posts on a specific topic, then see the Table of Contents in the right-hand column. While I try to work in the realm of facts, logic and moral absolutes, if there are any opinions expressed here, they are my own. -WilliamHartPhD
"Frames are among the cognitive structures we think with. For example, when you read a murder mystery, there is a typical frame with various kinds of characters: the murderer, victim or victims, possible accomplices, suspectsI particularly like how Lakoff and others root their discussion of frames and metaphors in biology (brain physiology). As to whether this will be a fruitful approach, we'll see. It should be helpful given my specific interest in studying the structure of mysteries., a motive, a murder weapon, a detective, clues. And there is a scenario in which the murder murders the victim and is later caught by the detective" (p. 22).
Claire had met her [Jill] a few times when she testified at trials. They had developed a mutual respect for each other rise through their male-dominated departments. (p. 278)Note: The novel is told in first person from Lindsay's perspective.
"I grew up in a house full of women: my mother, grandmother, three sisters, and two female cats. And I still have the buzz of their conversations in my head. As an adult, I have more female friends than male ones: I just love the way that women talk."Notice the similarity between this answer and the answer he gave in the video found in