The Victorians lived through a period of great social change. As industrialisation increased social and physical relocation, the idea of the stranger, the imposter and the villain was realised in the pages of crime reporting newspapers and through the genre of the detective novel.
Keen to read what was happening in this changing social world, the Victorian public took notice of crime, sensation and justice. They looked to the emerging police force and the services of the private detective for protection from an imagined, and sometime actualised, threat of violence, theft and murder.
As a genre, the detective story remains highly influential. Primarily, this is because although the detective formula invites us to solve the mystery and outwit the criminal, it is the mysterious figure of the rational detective who reassures us when we fail. This course will examine this aspect of three popular Victorian detectives, C Auguste Dupin, Sergeant Cuff and Sherlock Holmes, alongside details of some real Victorian criminal cases.
This course is part of The Oxford Experience summer school, held at Christ Church.