Arthur Conan Doyle and the Swiss Literary Landscape. The Description of the Reichenbach Falls in The Final Problem
Keywords:
Alps, Verticality, Strand magazineAbstract
The essay examines A. C. Doyle's short story The Final Problem (1893) set in the Bernese Alps, where the detective falls down the Reichenbach Falls while struggling with Moriarty. In a first stage, the article higlights the central role that the Alps from the 18th century onwards played in literature and art, especially in Switzerland (e.g. Haller, Rousseau, Hodler) and in Great Britain (Byron, Ruskin, Turner) and it contextualises the text within Doyle's biography. In a second stage, the essay deals with the representation of space, in particular with the implications of the dimension of verticality in the short story, which alludes to and transvaluates culturological discourses particularly rooted in the Swiss context such as the sublime and the dichotomy between Alpine microcosm and city.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Anna Fattori
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