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E-raamat: Cambridge Companion to Sherlock Holmes

Edited by (University of Salford), Edited by (University of Portsmouth)
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Sherlock Holmes is the most famous fictional detective in history, with a popularity that has never waned since catching the imagination of his late-Victorian readership. This Companion explores Holmes' popularity and his complex relationship to the late-Victorian and modernist periods; on one hand bearing the imprint of a range of Victorian anxieties and preoccupations, while on the other shaping popular conceptions of criminality, deviance, and the powers of the detective. This collection explores these questions in three parts. 'Contexts' explores late-Victorian culture, from the emergence of detective fiction to ideas of evolution, gender, and Englishness. 'Case Studies' reads selected Holmes adventures in the context of empire, visual culture, and the gothic. Finally, 'Holmesian Afterlives' investigates the relationship between Holmes and literary theory, film and theatre adaptations, new Holmesian novels, and the fandom that now surrounds him.

Arvustused

'An exceptional bibliography completes this volume, which will be particularly useful for beginning Holmesians Recommended.' B. Diemert, Choice ' a welcome and important contribution, and it is attractively produced I look forward to engaging with this volume both in my scholarship and in my teaching.' Tom Ue, Victorian Studies

Muu info

Accessible exploration of Sherlock Holmes and his relationship to late-Victorian culture as well as his ongoing significance and popularity.
List of Illustrations
vii
Notes on Contributors viii
Acknowledgements xii
Textual Note xiii
Chronology xv
1 Introduction
1(14)
Janice M. Allan
Christopher Pittard
PART I CONTEXTS
2 Holmes and the History of Detective Fiction
15(14)
Merrick Burrow
3 Doyle, Holmes and Victorian Publishing
29(13)
Clare Clarke
4 Doyle, Holmes and London
42(13)
Stephen Knight
5 Englishness and Rural England
55(13)
Christine Berberich
6 Gender and Sexuality in Holmes
68(13)
Stacy Gillis
7 Doyle and Evolution
81(15)
Jonathan Cranfield
8 Doyle and the Criminal Body
96(15)
Stephan Karschay
9 Holmes, Law and Order
111(16)
Jeremy Tambling
PART II CASE STUDIES
10 The Empires of A Study in Scarlet and The Sign of Four
127(13)
Caroline Reitz
11 Sidney Paget and Visual Culture in the Adventures and Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
140(28)
Christopher Pittard
12 Gothic Returns: The Hound of the Baskervilles
168(17)
Janice M. Allan
PART III HOLMESIAN AFTERLIVES
13 Holmes and Literary Theory
185(14)
Bran Nicol
14 Adapting Holmes
199(14)
Neil Mccaw
15 Neo-Holmesian Fiction
213(15)
Catherine Wynne
16 Sherlockian Fandom
228(15)
Roberta Pearson
Further Reading 243(15)
Index 258
Janice M. Allan is Associate Dean Academic, at the School of Arts and Media, University of Salford. She has published widely on nineteenth-century popular fiction as well as constructions of gender and literary value and is Executive Editor of Clues: A Journal of Detection. Christopher Pittard is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Portsmouth. He is the author of Purity and Contamination in Late Victorian Detective Fiction (2011), and numerous articles and chapters on Victorian popular culture and detective fiction.