Lectures/Oct 31, 2024

Byzantine Crime Novels in the Twenty-first Century: From History to Fiction

Byzantine Crime Novels in the Twenty-first Century: From History to Fiction lead image

Byzantine Crime Novels in the Twenty-first Century: From History to Fiction, lecture by Panagiotis Agapitos (University of Mainz), Simon Fraser University, November 12, 2024, 7:00 pm

This lecture tackles the question of “authenticity” when writing crime novels set in the remote past. The speaker’s three novels (published between 2003 and 2009 in Greece), that are set in the first half of ninth-century Byzantium during the rule of the last iconoclast emperor, Theophilos (r. 829–842), form the basis of a lively discussion about the challenges of producing a satisfactory narrative. The fairly clear generic conventions of a traditional British-style mystery are not applicable to a medieval culture such as Byzantium, starting with the basic issue of the absence of detection and the relevant detective. Contemporary fans of crime fiction have broad expectations about what a detective novel should be, but they also want a feeling of “real” history in the narrative. In his novels, the speaker tackles this problem by employing various techniques derived from Byzantine rhetoric and narrative, while, at the same time using archaeological, historical and textual studies to offer a medieval yet contemporary crime story that feels medieval but is, in fact, postmodern.

Panagiotis Agapitos is the Gutenberg Distinguished Research Fellow in Byzantine Literature at the University of Mainz. Previously, he taught for 25 years at the University of Cyprus as Professor of Byzantine Literature and Culture in the Department of Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies. He studied at the University of Munich and received his Ph.D. from Harvard University. In his free time, he writes “mystery stories” set in ninth-century Byzantium.

Advance registration required.