Popular Culture Review Vol. 14, No. 2, Summer 2003 | Page 43

Female Academic Detectives 39 is such a thing - and Beth fights for its integrity. Finally, it seems that the mysteries she becomes involved in are, for Beth, a way of becoming part of a temporary community - a community of people trying to solve or concerned about the crime. In The George Eliot Murders, for example, Beth becomes part of a Hawaii hotel community, and more specifically, a small community of tennis players, whom she observes carefully in order to narrow down the list of suspects for a brutal murder. Of course, since she cannot be sure whom to trust, this kind of “crime solving community” is not a close or lasting community - but it does represent well one kind of complex interrelation and interdependence between individual and community in these novels: Beth has to remain an individual critical thinker, has to remain on her guard, in order to help achieve what is ultimately good for the community. J.S. Borthwick’s Sarah Deane resembles Beth in her propensity to become a part of the community she temporarily works and sleuths in. Since the only other constants we meet from her life are Alex and her aunt Julia, we can’t tell whether communities of friends, neighbors, or organized groups play much of a role for her. When Beth and Sarah investigate academic mysteries, they both help restore the academic/collegial community into a more cohesive and peaceful place - but they also expose and critique problems in this community (or at least the novels expose them for us): in The Mark Twain Murders, academic rivalries, the pressure to publish, student exploitation, and inconsistent applications of plagiarism penal ties; in The Student Body, professorial incompetence, clearly delineated academic hierarchies, and various petty rivalries and jealousies. Karen Pelletier also works in the service of an academic community, both by helping to restore “order” or effecting change, often by exposing academic pres sures and politics. In Quieter Than Sleep, the killer she helps catch is an unproduc tive senior female scholar, threatened by the content and speed of her colleagues’ research (the murder victim’s discovery of a Dickinson letter throws years of her research into question). While this solution to the mystery constitutes an ironic critique of individual professors’ idiosyncrasies, it also attacks the old academic “publish or perish” syndrome - it blames not only the individual, but also institu tional priorities. The Raven and the Nightingale has Karen involved in another com bined critique and defense of “the academic community”: she helps find the killer of the colleague she disagrees with, but she also has some sympathy for this killer, who turns out to be an adjunct instructor desperate to land a tenure track job in a tight job market. Once again, her intention of restoring order in her academic com munity does not signify full support for the politics ad ideology of this community. Nowhere is this dynamic more noticeable than in the Kate Fansler mysteries. While not all of her mysteries involve crimes in academia, those that do allow her to fight for those aspects of the “academic community” she believes in, while also