Powerful Women (Not) Beating Sherlock Holmes: BBC Sherlock’s Postfeminist Women
Keywords
Loading...
Authors
Issue Date
2021-07-19
Language
en
Document type
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Title
ISSN
Volume
Issue
Startpage
Endpage
DOI
Abstract
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories have been adapted many times and new examples continue to appear every year. One recent adaptation, the BBC’s Sherlock, changes the setting of the stories from Victorian London to the twenty-first century, which has a more significant impact on its female characters compared to its male characters. The effects of this on women, both adapted and new characters, will be explored here by examining four characters: Mrs Hudson, Mary Morstan/Watson, Molly Hooper, and Eurus Holmes. The adapted characters will be compared to Doyle’s stories, and all four will be analysed through features of postfeminism. This term can be used to describe the entanglement of feminist and anti-feminist ideas that can be found in the media culture and everyday life of the 2010s. This entanglement can also be found in Sherlock through the increasing attempts at empowering its female characters, but ultimately never allowing them to be more powerful than main male character Sherlock Holmes.
Description
Citation
Supervisor
Faculty
Faculteit der Letteren