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A Study in Sherlock

July 18, 2012

Sherlock Holmes: great detective, iconic literary creation… and Twitter phenomenon?

@MycroftHolmes RIP Moriarty. Changing my name to Sigerson. Don’t tell Watson.
If Steele’s classic 1903 illustration of “The Empty House” had a Twitter caption…
(Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons)

Prompted by the sensation of the #IBelieveInSherlockHolmes hashtag, Jeanette Laredo investigates the Sherlockian world and the ways in which the cannon invites readers and viewers deeper inside its mysteries. How did a Victorian text create a perfect environment for fandoms both before and after the advent of digital media? More controversially, this cosmos changes the stakes of fan culture for academia:

Like Watson, we desire access to the potential fictional worlds contained in Sherlock’s early case files. The writings of The Baker Street Journal as fan fiction pull at the red tape that binds the untold cases of the great detective. As fan fiction they reify a connection to the fictional world by making the reader/fan an active participant in creating that world.

Read more at the Journal of Victorian Culture Online.

Filed Under: NER Recommends Tagged With: Baker Street Irregulars, I Believe in Sherlock Holmes, Jeanette Laredo, Journal of Victorian Studies Online, Sherlock Holmes, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Storyworlds


Vol. 43, No. 4

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Serhiy Zhadan

Literature & Democracy

Serhiy Zhadan

“That’s the appeal of writing: you treat the world like a potential text, using it as material, setting yourself apart, stepping out.”

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