tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2956288600403860320.post1268763911354298938..comments2023-12-26T12:18:55.616+00:00Comments on Doyleockian: A Study in domesticityAlistair Duncanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16199962410016780822noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2956288600403860320.post-2326212696808436862014-03-09T12:55:44.153+00:002014-03-09T12:55:44.153+00:00Great article.
In my field we're suppose... Great article. <br /> In my field we're supposed to look at the whole person the social and emotional aspects (the spice of domesticity) especially. To me it's really interesting to delve into why a person behaves the way they do. What parts are nature & what parts are nurture. However, the part of me that likes a good story doesn't want to be left with just that and no plot to speak of. I understand why Conan Doyle found it irrelevant & to me that makes the few details he did give us that much sweeter. Sometimes it's just more fun to be left enough room to speculate & make the domestic bits what you as the reader want them to be :) Lizzie Gaskinshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03137766283989065159noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2956288600403860320.post-22326031895839517852014-03-07T22:56:10.985+00:002014-03-07T22:56:10.985+00:00For me the amount of information on the lives of H...For me the amount of information on the lives of Holmes and Watson away from crime is absolutely enough. I love the stories because of the deductions and the process of investigation. In a television series the need for more privacy is natural, viewers can better identify themselves with a character this way. PantaRheihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09262322537039828177noreply@blogger.com