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Sherlock's Sisters: The British Female Detective, 1864-1913 (Nineteenth Century Series)
 
 
Sherlock's Sisters: The British Female Detective, 1864-1913 (Nineteenth Century Series) (Hardcover)
by Joseph A. Kestner (Author) "The appearance of the female detective in English fiction during the nineteenth century was a result of a complex intersection of legal, social, moral, institutional..." (more)
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Synopsis
This title examines the fictional female detective in Victorian and Edwardian literature. This character, originating in the 1860s, configures a new representation of women in narratives of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This analysis explores female empowerment through professional unofficial or official detection, especially as this surveillance illuminates legal, moral, gendered, institutional, criminal, punitive, judicial, political, and familial practices. The book considers a range of literary texts by both female and male writers which concentrate on detection by women, particularly those which followed the creation of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle in 1887. Cultural movements, such as the emergence of the New Woman, property law or suffragism, are stressed in the exploits of these resourceful investigators. These daring women deal with a range of crimes, including murder, blackmail, terrorism, forgery, theft, sexual harassment, embezzlement, fraud, impersonation and domestic violence. Privileging the exercise of reason rather than intuition, these women detectives are proto-feminist in their demonstration of women's independence.

Instead of being under the law, these women transform it. Their investigations are given particular edge because many of the perpetrators of these crimes are women. "Sherlock's Sisters" probes many texts which, because of their rarity, have been under-researched. Writers such as Beatrice Heron-Maxwell, Emmuska Orczy, L.T. Meade, Catherine Pirkis, Fergus Hume, Grant Allen, Leonard Merrick, Marie Belloc Lowndes, George Sims, McDonnell Bodkin and Richard Marsh are here incorporated into the canon of Victorian and Edwardian literature, many for the first time. A writer such as Mary Elizabeth Braddon is reassessed through a neglected novel. The book includes works by Irish and Australian writers to present an inclusive array of British texts. The book enlarges the perception of emerging female empowerment during the 19th century, filling an important gap in the fields of gender studies, law/literature and popular culture.


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The appearance of the female detective in English fiction during the nineteenth century was a result of a complex intersection of legal, social, moral, institutional and gendered practises. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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