Rogue literature

noun·Victorian

English narratives told from the criminal's perspective, from Elizabethan pamphlets through Defoe; the long pre-history of the detective story.

A tradition of English prose stretching from the Elizabethan pamphlets of Robert Greene and Thomas Dekker through the picaresque novels of Defoe and Smollett — narratives told from the criminal's perspective, exposing the methods and slang of the underworld. Rogue literature is the long pre-history of the modern detective story, supplying its vocabulary, its settings, and its moral interest in the criminal mind.

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