Ideology In Sherlock Holmes

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Ideology
An ideology is an idea, tor personal or individual but an idea shared by a group or culture about how society should function. Ideology is a “world view”, system of values, believes or attitudes that holds to be truth or important. Dominant ideologies, believes, that we live by or fallow in our everyday life are repeatedly told to us by important institutions such as education, the church, law and also media. We often do not question these believes this prevents people form rebelling against them and also keeps a sense of stability in society. Ideology is a form of analysis that can be applied to almost any text, print or visual.

Sherlock Info
Sherlock Holmes, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle became popular in his day and still remained popular. Values, mores and world view are talking about ideology, pattern of ideas. To get popular. Ideology must be something large audience want to read about, which for most people means it is an ideology they share. And Sherlock Holmes was once again adapted to a new TV series. A theory quote by Stephen Knight: “... crime fiction not only create and idea (or a hope, or a dream) about controlling crime, but both realise and validate a whole view of the world, one shared by the people who became the central audience ...” (Knight, S. (1980) Form and Ideology in Crime Fiction pt-2).

In “The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes” we can find repeating patterns in villains and heroes. The detective consulted not only by the regular police but also by members of international royalty and local businessman, accessible to all people, takes cases as means of distraction rather than way of making money.

Crime and Violence
Watson is the man of respectable character the reliable married man, the medical doc...

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...olmes as an extraordinary violinist and music enthusiast, attending performances. In the latest adaptations Holmes' violin playing is mentioned in context of small hours and occasionally portrayed as a annoying habit.

Emotions
In the novel Watson says about Holmes that “an emotion in Holmes would be like a grit in a fine instrument”. However in the latest Guy Richie Sherlock Holmes movie and even in the BBC adaptation Watson rather demonstrates the effect of the emotions on his friend. It could be a desire of an modern audience to see more of the human side of Sherlock Holmes that is occasionally compared to modern “robocop” by media, to make him more appealing to the society that values emotion. Although, at the end he sets the emotion aside and solves the problem/case rationally, he returns to logic and science, demonstrating that in a way the reason beats all.

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