Baroque Sherlock: Benjamin’s friendship between «criminal and detective» in its fore- and afterlife

The starting point of this paper is a statement that Benjamin makes in a group of notes he writes for his project of a detective novel (1933). Benjamin writes here that «criminal and detective could be so friends [so befreundet sein] as Sherlock Holmes and Watson». We’ll try to understand the meani...

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Main Author: Alice Barale
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2017-12-01
Series:Aisthesis
Subjects:
web
Online Access:https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/aisthesis/article/view/942
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spelling doaj-7418205640234e18a3a9608861358b0d2020-11-25T00:06:20ZengFirenze University PressAisthesis2035-84662017-12-01102Baroque Sherlock: Benjamin’s friendship between «criminal and detective» in its fore- and afterlifeAlice Barale0Università degli Studi di Firenze The starting point of this paper is a statement that Benjamin makes in a group of notes he writes for his project of a detective novel (1933). Benjamin writes here that «criminal and detective could be so friends [so befreundet sein] as Sherlock Holmes and Watson». We’ll try to understand the meaning of this statement through the investigation of the detective topic in two moments of its fore and afterlife: its fore life in Benjamin’s meditation on the baroque (why it is so will be apparent shortly) and its after life in Sherlock Holmes’s most recent apparition, in the BBC series Sherlock. One of the most interesting elements of this series is in fact the relationship – which is barely sketched in Conan Doyle’s stories – between Sherlock Holmes and his antagonist, the maths professor Jim Moriarty. We’ll see that in Benjamin’s notes for a detective novel the criminal is not a maths professor but a psychoanalyst. What is the difference, anyway, between professor Moriarty’s knowledge and Sherlock’s knowledge? In fact, we will find out that criminal and detective are closer to one other (more «befreundet») than what we may be induced to think – close but not coincident. https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/aisthesis/article/view/942Sherlock HolmesWalter Benjaminweb
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alice Barale
spellingShingle Alice Barale
Baroque Sherlock: Benjamin’s friendship between «criminal and detective» in its fore- and afterlife
Aisthesis
Sherlock Holmes
Walter Benjamin
web
author_facet Alice Barale
author_sort Alice Barale
title Baroque Sherlock: Benjamin’s friendship between «criminal and detective» in its fore- and afterlife
title_short Baroque Sherlock: Benjamin’s friendship between «criminal and detective» in its fore- and afterlife
title_full Baroque Sherlock: Benjamin’s friendship between «criminal and detective» in its fore- and afterlife
title_fullStr Baroque Sherlock: Benjamin’s friendship between «criminal and detective» in its fore- and afterlife
title_full_unstemmed Baroque Sherlock: Benjamin’s friendship between «criminal and detective» in its fore- and afterlife
title_sort baroque sherlock: benjamin’s friendship between «criminal and detective» in its fore- and afterlife
publisher Firenze University Press
series Aisthesis
issn 2035-8466
publishDate 2017-12-01
description The starting point of this paper is a statement that Benjamin makes in a group of notes he writes for his project of a detective novel (1933). Benjamin writes here that «criminal and detective could be so friends [so befreundet sein] as Sherlock Holmes and Watson». We’ll try to understand the meaning of this statement through the investigation of the detective topic in two moments of its fore and afterlife: its fore life in Benjamin’s meditation on the baroque (why it is so will be apparent shortly) and its after life in Sherlock Holmes’s most recent apparition, in the BBC series Sherlock. One of the most interesting elements of this series is in fact the relationship – which is barely sketched in Conan Doyle’s stories – between Sherlock Holmes and his antagonist, the maths professor Jim Moriarty. We’ll see that in Benjamin’s notes for a detective novel the criminal is not a maths professor but a psychoanalyst. What is the difference, anyway, between professor Moriarty’s knowledge and Sherlock’s knowledge? In fact, we will find out that criminal and detective are closer to one other (more «befreundet») than what we may be induced to think – close but not coincident.
topic Sherlock Holmes
Walter Benjamin
web
url https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/aisthesis/article/view/942
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