elementary, my dear watson hum 2212: british and american literature i fall 2012 dr. perdigao...

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Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

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Page 1: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Elementary, my dear Watson

HUM 2212: British and American Literature IFall 2012

Dr. PerdigaoNovember 7-14, 2012

Page 2: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012
Page 3: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Doyled Again• Sir Arthur Conan Doyle born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1859

• Studied medicine at Edinburgh University and settled in London

• Wrote while in practice in London

• A Study in Scarlet as first successful story, appeared in Beeton’s Christmas Annual in 1887

• Left medicine after success of The Sign of Four in 1890 to write full-time

• Killed off Sherlock Holmes character in “The Final Problem,” published in 1893, but, due to public outcry and protest, resurrected the character

• Doyle as historian, whaler, athlete, war correspondent, and spiritualist

• Knighted in 1902 for work in South African field hospital during the Boer War

• Died in 1930

Page 4: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Doyled Again• When A Study in Scarlet came out, Doyle received a flat fee of 25 pounds

(about $120)

• Magazine did not sell out, mixed reviews (some noting indebtedness to Edgar Allan Poe’s C. Auguste Dupin)

• Book publication led to Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine buying The Sign of Four in 1890

• The Strand magazine (the Life magazine of its era) published “A Scandal in Bohemia” in 1891 and new stories featuring Holmes sold out

• Magazine changed owners in 1951 and new issue featured Holmes on cover, showing longstanding connection between the magazine and the character

• The Hound of the Baskervilles offered return of Holmes that ran from August 1901 until April of the following year, then “The Empty House”

• Doyle continued writing stories until 1927, with Holmes retiring in 1903 or 1904 to tend bees, with “His Last Bow” taking him out of retirement

Page 5: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Framing Holmes• 4 novels and 56 short stories featuring the character

• Holmes believed to have a birthdate of January 6, 1854

• Lives at 221b Baker Street, since 1881

• Studies at university—believed to be chemistry; chemistry lab in house

• Brother Mycroft, government official

• Lives with Dr. John H. Watson until his marriage, then again after his wife’s death

• Landlady Mrs. Hudson

• Stories as frame narratives (story within the story)

Page 6: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Disguises• Watson appears in 56 of the 60 published adventures • 2 told by third-person narrator (“The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone” and

“His Last Bow”) and Holmes narrates “The Adventure of the Lion’s Mane” and “The Adventure of the Blanched Soldier”; “The Musgrave Ritual” and “Gloria Scott” are told from Holmes’ memories while Watson narrates

• Partnership between 1881-1914

• Masculinist character of the period in late nineteenth-century English society

• Guinness World Records lists Holmes as most portrayed movie character—75 actors in 211 films

• 1905 silent screen debut (although 1900 vignette Sherlock Holmes Baffled)

• Fourteen Universal features starring Basil Rathbone from 1939-1946, with Nigel Bruce as comical Watson character (overweight, bumbler)

Page 7: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1939)Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce (Holmes and Watson)

Page 8: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Deerstalker cap and pipe

Page 9: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Buster Keaton

Page 10: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Doyled Again• Buster Keaton in Sherlock Jr. (1924)

• The Return of Sherlock Holmes (1929), starring Clive Brook, first sound film to feature the character and one given credit for the line “Elementary, my dear Watson”

• Without a Clue (1988)

• On television, Jeremy Brett played role from 1984-1994

• House and CSI play with references to Holmes (“Who Shot Sherlock?”)

• BBC series Sherlock (2010-present) (by writers of Doctor Who)—blogging

• Elementary (2012-present)

Page 11: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Cyberworld Sherlock?

Page 12: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Cyberworld Sherlock?

Page 13: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Doyled Again• Guy Ritchie: “What you’ve got going on with our movie is a complete re

invention process of an iconic figure . . . We have gone back to the books themselves. In them, Holmes is a very compelling hero: an inquisitive, tortured, complex genius, who is also an action man.” (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/6789921/Sherlock-Holmes-pipe-dreams.html)

• As “James Bond in 1891”

Page 14: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Elementary…• Watson’s role as storyteller and buffer between Holmes and reader

• “appear[s] less astute than the reader, rendering himself more approachable than the aloof and awesome Holmes, without sacrificing respect for his native intelligence” (Estleman xiii).

• Characteristic Watson: bravery in The Hound of the Baskervilles and “The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton”; past 60 years old, offered surgical skills to England on eve of WWI (Estleman x).

• Gambling problem—Holmes with Watson’s checkbook locked away; theories about multiple marriages

• Holmes’ use of cocaine, morphine

• Watson’s rehabilitation of Holmes

Page 15: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Reframing• Holmes’ characterization—counter to Lestrade (who jumps to conclusions,

like us)

• Flair for showmanship, arrogance

• Starts out poor, “A Scandal in Bohemia” brings him 1000 pounds (at time, 60-100 pounds as decent salary)

• Does pro bono work, charges wealthy clients more

Page 16: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Another Fight Club?• Baritsu vs. Wing-Chun Kung Fu

• Bartitsu, martial art created by British engineer Edward-William Barton Wright (1860-1951)

• Misspelling in The Times article in 1901; two years later, “The Adventure of the Empty House” introduced the style

• Bartitsu is mix of Japanese jujitsu and English and French boxing

• Conan Doyle as amateur boxer

• Robert Downey Jr. and Guy Ritchie study Wing-Chun Kung Fu (Bruce Lee popularized), change for film

Page 17: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Reasoning and unreasoning• Forensic science

• Pseudo-scientific approach—phrenology

• Abductive reasoning

• Criminology

• Fingerprints, gun powder residue

• Science vs. magic, supernatural

• Holmes as ultimate rationalist but Doyle as spiritualist, connection to Harry Houdini, the Cottingley fairy case

• Doyle reading Grimm’s fairy tales at time of writing “The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire”

• Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes, debunking magic, triumph of science

Page 18: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

The Woman• Irene Adler is only woman to impress him; she only appears in “A Scandal in

Bohemia” but is mentioned throughout the stories as his equal

• “In his eyes she eclipses and predominates the whole of her sex” (239).

• Idea that Holmes is asexual, doesn’t understand Watson’s interest in Mary

• Degrading to women

• Disguises—gender-bending performances in story

• March 1888 as setting

• References to Study in Scarlet (240)

• Watson comments that Holmes’ deductions would lead to accusations of witchcraft (241)

• Idea of unobserved life

Page 19: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Secrets and Lies• Paper made in Bohemia

• German—syntax

• Count Van Kramm, Bohemian nobleman (244)

• King—Wilhlem Gottsreich Sigismond von Ormstein, Grand Duke of Cassel-Felstein and hereditary King of Bohemia (245)

• Connection to Irene Adler

• Looks up in the index—American, NJ born in 1858, performed as prima donna Imperial Opera of Warsaw

• Marriage to Godfrey Norton

• Women as “naturally secretive” (255)

Page 20: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Gender Equity?• “Fire”

• Proposed costume in “A Scandal in Belgravia”

• Leaves for the Continent

• Photograph of Irene Adler left

• Letter

• “Male costume is nothing new to me. I often take advantage of the freedom which it gives” (261)

Page 21: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Rebooting?• Resurrection of Holmes with “The Empty House” in 1903

• Lapse in Holmes narrative from 1891 to 1894 between “The Final Problem” and “The Empty House”

• Passing of Victorian age with turn to the twentieth century, now to the twenty-first century

Page 22: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012
Page 23: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012
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Traces• “The Speckled Band” (published in 1892, set in 1883)

• “The Speckled Blonde”

• Description of “methods”: http://www.thescienceofdeduction.co.uk/• http://www.johnwatsonblog.co.uk/

• Supernatural and fantastic

• Roylotts of Stoke Moran, Surrey

• Stepdaughter of last survivor • Usher? (Not that Usher)

• Stepfather—medical career in Calcutta

• Exotic—India

Page 34: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Threads• Twin Julia • Usher Usher?

• Railway accident • Chopin story?

• Mania, residing in tropics—madness (1834)

• Violence, fear of exposure• Hyde?

• Sister died two years ago (1834)

• Aunt Miss Honoria Westphail

• Sister visited, engaged to major of Marines

• Died of shock

Page 35: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Blogging 101• “Locked room” mystery

• “It was the band!” (1836)

• Or gipsies?

• Different interpretations

• “dark enough, and sinister enough” (1838), not most

• Grimesby Roylott appears (1839)

• Holmes’ strength—straightens poker

• Threat of danger (1844)• Come anyway

• Difficulty in reasoning, insufficient data (1848)

Page 36: Elementary, my dear Watson HUM 2212: British and American Literature I Fall 2012 Dr. Perdigao November 7-14, 2012

Blogging 101• Eastern training—exotic, dangerous (to other scientists, British/India divide)