- Wed Nov 18, 2020 11:58 am
#81249
I'm happy to help clear things up for you, blade21cn!
Snobbery is a condescending attitude that others are somehow beneath you, that they are not fancy or refined enough to be at your level. Based on the context in the passage, then, an inverted snobbery is the attitude on the part of devotees to the crime fiction genre that P.D. James is trying to be too fancy and refined, and that she is therefore operating at too high a level to exist in their world.
Shameless, as used here, appears to me to mean that the author thinks James doesn't seem to care all that much about following the conventions of crime fiction. If she did, she would pay more attention to the manner in which the story is advanced and the crime is solved. It's evidence that supports the author's later contention that perhaps James should move past the crime fiction genre altogether, since it seems that's what she wants to do. So it's not necessarily bad or awful, or a negative character trait, but just a certain devil-may-care attitude, one that indicates that the author is unconcerned with meeting the normal expectations.
Adam M. Tyson
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