Who IS Sherlock Holmes Neil McCaw

More than a century after first emerging

into the fog-bound,
gas-lit streets of Victorian London,

Sherlock Holmes
is universally recognizable.

Even his wardrobe and accessories
are iconic:

the Inverness cape,

deerstalker hat,

and calabash pipe,

and figures such as his best friend
and housemate Doctor Watson,

arch-nemesis Moriarty,

and housekeeper Mrs. Hudson

have become part of the popular
consciousness,

as have his extraordinary,
infallible powers of deduction

utilized in the name of the law,

his notorious drug use,

and his popular catchphrase,
“Elementary, my dear Watson.”

And yet many of these most recognizable
features of Holmes

don’t appear in Arthur Conan Doyle’s
original stories.

Doyle’s great detective solves
crimes in all sorts of ways,

not just using deduction.

He speculates, and at times even guesses,
and regularly makes false assumptions.

Furthermore, Mrs. Hudson
is barely mentioned,

no one says, “Elementary, my dear Watson,”

and the detective and his sidekick
live apart for much of the time.

Moriarty, the grand villain,
only appears in two stories,

the detective’s drug use is infrequent
after the first two novels,

and Holmes is rarely enthralled
to the English legal system;

He much prefers enacting his own form
of natural justice

to sticking to the letter of the law.

Finally, many of the most iconic elements
of the Holmesian legend

aren’t Doyle’s either.

The deerstalker cap and cape
were first imagined by Sidney Paget,

the story’s initial illustrator.

the curved pipe was chosen by
American actor William Gillette

so that audiences could more clearly see
his face on stage,

and the phrase,
“Elementary, my dear Watson,”

was coined by author and humorist
P.G. Wodehouse.

So who exactly is Sherlock Holmes?

Who’s the real great detective,
and where do we find him?

Purists might answer
that the original Sherlock

inspired by Arthur Conan Doyle’s
university mentor Dr. Joseph Bell

is the real one.

But the fact remains that that version
of Sherlock has been largely eclipsed

by the sheer volume of interpretation,

leaving Doyle’s detective
largely unrecognizable.

So there’s another, more complex,

but perhaps more satisfying
answer to the question,

but to get there, we must first consider
the vast body of interpretations

of the great detective.

Since Conan Doyle’s first story in 1887,

there have been thousands
of adaptations of Holmes,

making him perhaps the most adapted
fictional character in the world.

That process began with Victorian
stage adaptations,

and accelerated
with the emergence of film.

There were more than 100 film adaptations
of Holmes

in the first two decades
of the 20th century alone.

And since then, there have many thousands
more in print,

and on film,

television,

stage,

and radio.

Holmes has been reinterpreted
by people everywhere,

in remarkably different,
and often contradictory ways.

These adaptations demonstrate
both Holmes’s popularity

and his malleability.

For instance, he featured in a number
of allied anti-Nazi propaganda films

during World War II.

And both Winston Churchill
and Franklin Delano Roosevelt

were avid enthusiasts,

the latter even joining
the Baker Street Irregulars,

a Holmesian appreciation society,

and nicknaming one secret service
hideout Baker Street.

And yet, at the very same time,

Holmes also appeared in various
German-language film adaptations,

some of which were said to have been
much-loved favorites of Adolf Hitler.

So let’s return to our question.

Would the real Sherlock Holmes
please stand up?

The truth is that this world of adaptation
has made him into a palimpsest.

Sherlock is a cultural text,

repeatedly altered over time as each new
interpretation becomes superimposed

over those that proceed it.

This means that Sherlock
continually evolves,

embodying ideas and values
often far removed

from those found in Conan Doyle.

And after each particular story ends,
Sherlock rises again,

a little changed, perhaps,

with a new face and fresh mannerisms
or turns of phrase,

but still essentially Sherlock,
our Sherlock.

一个多世纪以来,福尔摩斯首次出现


维多利亚时代伦敦雾气缭绕、灯火通明的街道上,

已广为人知。

甚至他的衣橱和配饰
都是标志性的

:因弗内斯斗篷、

猎鹿帽

和葫芦管,

以及他最好的朋友
和室友华生医生、

死对头莫里亚蒂

和管家哈德森夫人等人物

已经成为大众
意识的一部分,

因为

以法律的名义,利用

他臭名昭著的吸毒

和流行的标语
“小学,我亲爱的华生”,利用了他非凡的,无误的推理能力。

然而,福尔摩斯的许多这些最知名的
特征

并没有出现在阿瑟柯南道尔的
原创故事中。

多伊尔的伟大侦探
以各种方式解决犯罪,

而不仅仅是使用推理。

他推测,有时甚至猜测,
并经常做出错误的假设。

此外,
几乎没有提到哈德森夫人,

没有人说,“小学,我亲爱的华生”

,侦探和他的搭档
大部分时间都分居。

大反派莫里亚蒂
只出现在两部小说中

,侦探吸毒
在前两部小说之后很少见

,福尔摩斯也很少
被英国法律制度所吸引;

他更喜欢制定自己
的自然正义形式,

而不是遵守法律条文。

最后,福尔摩斯传奇中许多最具标志性的元素

也不是 Doyle 的。

猎鹿帽和斗篷
最初是由故事的初始插画师西德尼·佩吉特(Sidney Paget)想象出来

的。

弯曲的管道由
美国演员威廉吉列特选择,

以便观众更清楚地看到
他在舞台上的脸,


“小学,我亲爱的华生”这句话

是由作家和幽默作家 P.G. 创造的。
伍德豪斯。

那么夏洛克·福尔摩斯到底是谁?

谁是真正的大侦探
,我们在哪里可以找到他?

纯粹主义者可能会回答
说,

受亚瑟柯南道尔的
大学导师约瑟夫贝尔博士启发的原版夏洛克

是真实的。

但事实仍然是,那个版本
的夏洛克在很大程度上

被大量的解释所掩盖,

让道尔的侦探
在很大程度上无法辨认。

因此,对于这个问题还有另一个更复杂,

但或许更令人满意的
答案,

但要做到这一点,我们必须首先考虑

这位伟大侦探的大量解释。

自从 1887 年柯南道尔的第一个故事以来

,福尔摩斯的改编作品已经有数千次,

这使他可能
是世界上改编最多的虚构人物。

这一过程始于维多利亚时代的
舞台改编,


随着电影的出现而加速。

仅在 20 世纪的前二十年,就有 100 多部福尔摩斯改编的电影。

从那时起,还有
成千上万的印刷品

、电影、

电视、

舞台

和广播。

福尔摩斯已经被
世界各地的人们重新诠释,

以截然不同
且常常相互矛盾的方式。

这些改编展示
了福尔摩斯的受欢迎程度

和他的可塑性。

例如,他在二战期间出演了多
部盟军反纳粹宣传片

温斯顿·丘吉尔
和富兰克林·德拉诺·罗斯福

都是狂热的爱好者

,后者甚至加入
了贝克街非正规军,这

是一个福尔摩斯鉴赏协会,

并给贝克街的一个秘密服务
藏身处取了绰号。

然而,与此同时,

福尔摩斯也出现在各种
德语电影改编中,

其中一些据说
是阿道夫·希特勒的最爱。

那么让我们回到我们的问题。 请

真正的福尔摩斯
站起来好吗?

事实是,这个适应的世界
已经让他变成了一个重写本。

《神探夏洛克》是一部文化文本,

随着时间的推移不断变化,因为每一种新的
解释都叠加

在那些继续进行的解释之上。

这意味着夏洛克
不断发展,

体现的思想和价值观
往往

与柯南道尔的思想和价值观相去甚远。

在每个特定的故事结束后,
Sherlock 再次站起来

,也许有点改变,换

了一张新面孔和新的举止
或措辞,

但本质上还是 Sherlock,
我们的 Sherlock。