Melodrama
noun·Victorian
Theatrical genre of exaggerated emotion and stark moral contrasts; used dismissively as a label for early detective fiction.
A theatrical genre marked by exaggerated emotion, sharp moral contrasts, and the eventual triumph of virtue — and a frequent dismissive label for detective fiction in its early years. Critics from the 1880s onward used “mere melodrama” as shorthand for any story they considered sensationally plotted and morally simplistic; the defenders of detective stories (Cecil Chesterton, R. Austin Freeman) wrote partly to rescue the form from the slur.