Friday, October 11, 2019
The Hound of the Baskervilles by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle :: English Literature
The Hound of the Baskervilles by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle    Examine how Conan Doyle establishes the setting for the novel in the  opening four chapters. How effective do you consider this to be?    ââ¬Å"The Hound of the Baskervillesâ⬠ was written in 1902 when the detective  genre had been established in England for around 50 years, by authors  such as Wilkie Collins and James Anderson who published ââ¬Å"Murder She  Wroteâ⬠. Arthur Conan Doyle contributed to the development of this  genre by creating Sherlock Holmes & Dr.Watson in a range of popular  short stories released in magazines. He was one of the most  significant, influential authors to this genre as he created the most  famous detective, in fiction, in Sherlock Holmes. Sherlock Holmes was  first introduced in ââ¬Å"A Study in Scarletâ⬠ which was published in 1887;  this won a lot of success and meant that Holmes featured as a main  character in future stories and novels written by Doyle. Doyle, born  in Edinburgh, Scotland began practicing medicine in 1882; his  knowledge from his education comes through in his writing and there  are many references to scientific sources. This gave his writing a new  dimension and was new for readers at the time which perhaps even  contributing to the popularity of his writing. In ââ¬Å"The Hound of the  Baskervillesâ⬠ Doyle establishes the setting through five main aspects.  These are a sense of time, places, genre, the plot and characters.    An important aspect of the setting is how Doyle presents the main  characters, their relationships and personalities. Doyle introduces 4  of the main characters in the opening chapters and begins to establish  their relationships most noticeably between Holmes and Watson. The  main characters are Holmes, Watson, Dr. Mortimer, the Baskerville  family and of course the hound itself. These different characters are  introduced in different chapters through different methods. This is  for a number of reasons; to differentiate them, to let each of them  have a different impact in the novel and because of the tradition from  previous stories containing some of the characters.    Holmes and Watson are not described in great detail but introduced in  the opening chapters through their dialogue. Doyle did this as he  didnââ¬â¢t need to introduce them in more depth as they had already been  well established to the readers through other short stories in which  they appeared before ââ¬Å"The Hound of the Baskervillesâ⬠. Readers at the  time already had a sense of their personalities and physical features  through their earlier introductions.    Holmes and Watson have a strong relationship in the novel which is  shown by the way they talk to each other, their actions and the way  they both try to solve the crime.  					    
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