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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
17 pages in length. The concept of alienation is critical to the fundamental basis of crime fiction, inasmuch as being estranged from individual people – or even society as a whole – triggers antisocial behavior so important to this particular literary genre. Without alienation in crime fiction, there would be no social friction between and among characters, making it highly difficult for an intriguing, often heart stopping story to unfold without the twisted thoughts and actions so prevalent to alienated individuals. The writer examines “L.A. Confidential,” “The Crying Game” and “Moll Flanders.” Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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17 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCcrmfc.rtf
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triggers antisocial behavior so important to this particular literary genre. Without alienation in crime fiction, there would be no social friction between and among characters, making it highly unlikely
for an intriguing, often heart stopping story to unfold without the twisted thoughts and actions so prevalent to alienated individuals. II. L.A. CONFIDENTIAL The film L.A. Confidential explores the
depths of mans ethical concerns in relation to his own existence and how his actions influence issues in his own life. Conspicuously absent from the movie is any depiction
of morally upstanding law enforcement representatives whose primary motivation is to see justice served; rather, the subplots revolve around each characters ability to address his personal feeling of alienation and
fully appreciate the aspects of personal ethics and social morality. Ed Exley, Bud White and Jack Vincennes are three very different cops who each want the glory of solving a
murder. With a collective approach to crime but an individual convergence upon this particular murder, all three men put forth their own crime-solving techniques that serve to draw each
one of them into question as to his value system and the manner in which he employs any ethical and moral application to solve this crime. The extent to
which any ethics and morals exist at all reflects the primary aspect that separates each mans level of social alienation. Exleys motivation is to achieve at any cost - even
when it calls for doing things against his or the departments ethical code - which clearly illustrates the presence of alienation - is quite significant. His golden boy status
within the police force gives him a sense of superiority over the other law enforcement personnel, affording him an unspoken advantage to which no one else is privy and "whose
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