: The detective often uses "wisecracks" as a tool to provoke rejection and physical pain, manifesting a self-defeating behavior pattern common in masochistic characters.

: In certain seminal works like Dashiell Hammett’s The Glass Key , the detective appears "erotically transfixed" by his own destruction, famously stating he might as well "take [his] punishment and get it over with".

The hard-boiled detective is traditionally defined as a cynical, disillusioned loner navigating a hostile, oppressive city. While often seen as an "anti-hero," his primary narrative function is frequently to act as a receiver of violence rather than just a dealer of justice.

: Some analyses suggest the detective's investigative trajectory is a "compulsively repetitive effort to put himself in harm’s way". This mirrors the Freudian concept of "repetition compulsion," where an individual seeks to master a past trauma by voluntarily recreating it.

: Unlike the "gentle" cerebral detectives of Golden Age fiction, the noir protagonist is often "brilliant but beaten-down," struggling with chronic problems like alcoholism and fractured domestic lives.

: The detective's journey is less about solving a clean riddle and more about navigating a physical gauntlet of bullets and betrayals. 2. Theoretical Framework: Hard-Boiled Masochism

Literary and psychological scholars identify a distinct "masochistic erotics" within the hard-boiled form.