Arthur Conan Doyle and the Meaning of Masculinity
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
The Nineteenth Century Series
ISBN-10
1859282644
ISBN-13
9781859282649
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint
Ashgate Publishing Limited
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Nov 30th, 2000
Print length
320 Pages
Weight
453 grams
Ksh 27,900.00
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A study of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, a valued icon of British manhood. Diana Barsham discusses Doyle's career and offers a revision of the Doyle myth. She explores his determination to become a great name in the culture of his day and the strains on his identity arising from this project.
A valued icon of British manhood, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has been the subject of numerous biographies since his death in 1930. All his biographers have drawn heavily on his own autobiography, Memories & Adventures, a collection of stories and anecdotes themed on the subject of masculinity and its representation. Diana Barsham discusses Doyle''s career in the context of that nineteenth-century biographical tradition which Dr Watson so successfully appropriated. It explores Doyle''s determination to become a great name in the culture of his day and the strains on his identity arising from this project. A Scotsman with an alcoholic, Irish, fairy-painting father, Doyle offered himself and his writings as a model of British manhood during the greatest crisis of British history. Doyle was committed to finding solutions to some of the most difficult cultural problematics of late Victorian masculinity. As novelist, war correspondent, historian, legal campaigner, propagandist and religious leader, he used his fame as the creator of Sherlock Holmes to refigure the spirit of British Imperialism. This original and thought-provoking study offers a revision of the Doyle myth. It presents his career as a series of dialoguic contestations with writers like Thomas Hardy and Winston Churchill to define the masculine presence in British culture. In his spiritualist campaign, Doyle took on the figure of St Paul in an attempt to create a new religious culture for a Socialist age.
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