Description

Book Synopsis
Arthur Conan Doyle’s second Sherlock Holmes novel is both a detective story and an imperial romance. Ostensibly the story of Mary Morstan, a beautiful young woman enlisting the help of Holmes to find her vanished father and solve the mystery of her receipt of a perfect pearl on the same date each year, it gradually uncovers a tale of treachery and human greed. The action audaciously ranges from penal settlements on the Andaman Islands to the suburban comfort of South London, and from the opium-fuelled violence of Agra Fort during the Indian ‘Mutiny’ to the cocaine-induced contemplation of Holmes’ own Baker Street.

This Broadview Edition places Doyle’s tale in the cultural, political, and social contexts of late nineteenth-century colonialism and imperialism. The appendices provide a wealth of relevant extracts from hard-to-find sources, including official reports, memoirs, newspaper editorials, and anthropological studies.



Trade Review
“In this erudite and provocative edition, Shafquat Towheed offers fans of both Sherlock Holmes and Arthur Conan Doyle an intricate account of the intertextual histories at the heart of The Sign of Four. Arguing for the inextricability of its colonial plots with its work as detective fiction, Towheed builds a persuasive case for The Sign of Four as Mutiny fiction, positioning it as pivotal to the imperial career of ‘British’ fiction per se. Readers of this edition will be gripped by the colonial pathways Towheed reveals, the politics of citation he uncovers, and the entanglement of home and empire he tracks in the making of the novel. This is postcolonial interpretation at its very best.” — Antoinette Burton, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • Arthur Conan Doyle: A Brief Chronology
  • A Note on the Text
  • The Sign of Four
  • Appendix A: Domestic Context
  • Appendix B: Colonial Contexts: Accounts of the Indian “Mutiny,” 1857–58
  • Appendix C: Colonial Contexts: The First and Second Anglo-Afghan Wars
  • Appendix D: Colonial Contexts: The Andaman Islands
  • Appendix E: Contemporary Reviews
  • Select Bibliography

The Sign of Four

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A Paperback / softback by Arthur Conan Doyle, Shafquat Towheed

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    View other formats and editions of The Sign of Four by Arthur Conan Doyle

    Publisher: Broadview Press Ltd
    Publication Date: 30/07/2010
    ISBN13: 9781551118376, 978-1551118376
    ISBN10: 1551118378

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Arthur Conan Doyle’s second Sherlock Holmes novel is both a detective story and an imperial romance. Ostensibly the story of Mary Morstan, a beautiful young woman enlisting the help of Holmes to find her vanished father and solve the mystery of her receipt of a perfect pearl on the same date each year, it gradually uncovers a tale of treachery and human greed. The action audaciously ranges from penal settlements on the Andaman Islands to the suburban comfort of South London, and from the opium-fuelled violence of Agra Fort during the Indian ‘Mutiny’ to the cocaine-induced contemplation of Holmes’ own Baker Street.

    This Broadview Edition places Doyle’s tale in the cultural, political, and social contexts of late nineteenth-century colonialism and imperialism. The appendices provide a wealth of relevant extracts from hard-to-find sources, including official reports, memoirs, newspaper editorials, and anthropological studies.



    Trade Review
    “In this erudite and provocative edition, Shafquat Towheed offers fans of both Sherlock Holmes and Arthur Conan Doyle an intricate account of the intertextual histories at the heart of The Sign of Four. Arguing for the inextricability of its colonial plots with its work as detective fiction, Towheed builds a persuasive case for The Sign of Four as Mutiny fiction, positioning it as pivotal to the imperial career of ‘British’ fiction per se. Readers of this edition will be gripped by the colonial pathways Towheed reveals, the politics of citation he uncovers, and the entanglement of home and empire he tracks in the making of the novel. This is postcolonial interpretation at its very best.” — Antoinette Burton, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

    Table of Contents
    • Acknowledgements
    • Introduction
    • Arthur Conan Doyle: A Brief Chronology
    • A Note on the Text
    • The Sign of Four
    • Appendix A: Domestic Context
    • Appendix B: Colonial Contexts: Accounts of the Indian “Mutiny,” 1857–58
    • Appendix C: Colonial Contexts: The First and Second Anglo-Afghan Wars
    • Appendix D: Colonial Contexts: The Andaman Islands
    • Appendix E: Contemporary Reviews
    • Select Bibliography

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