1. Whodunit to Irene Adler? From 'the Woman' to 'the Dominatrix' – on the Transformation of the Heroine in the Adapting Process and Her Representation in the Sherlock Miniseries
- Author
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Popłońska, Magdalena, University of Łódź, and Magdalena Popłońska earned her bachelor’s degree in English Philology at the University of Łódź. Her thesis, entitled 'From the Streets of London to the Great Detective – the Role of the City in the Sherlock Holmes Canon,' received a distinction. From the very beginning of her studies she has taken active part in the projects of Geoffrey Chaucer Student Society. Her research interests include: the Sherlock Holmes Canon, history, society and cultural life of Victorian London, nineteenth and twentieth-century literature, classic literature adaptations, popular culture, media audiences and fandoms, digital culture, intertextuality, metafiction, meta analysis, as well as the theory of memory and perspective. She is currently working on her MA dissertation, which will revolve around the topics of memory and perspective in Michael Frayn’s drama, Copenhagen.
- Subjects
transmedia fandom ,Irene Adler ,Sherlock Holmes ,fan fiction ,adaptation ,appropriation ,reinterpretation - Abstract
One of the peculiar characteristics of the Sherlock Holmes fandom is that it has always had a tendency to blow innuendos in Arthur Conan Doyle’s stories out of proportion. One might argue that such is the case of Irene Adler, the most recognisable female character from the Sherlock Holmes canon. Although we are not given much information on her in the original story and she hardly speaks in her own voice, for the community of readers she has become the most significant woman that Sherlock Holmes had ever encountered. Thus, the creators who adapted her for the screen also treated the heroine of “A Scandal in Bohemia” symbolically, allowing themselves to freely portray her presence in their versions of the story. For certain reasons, Irene Adler has been interpreted in pop-culture differently at various times: as the woman who beat Holmes with her wit, the detective’s romantic interest, his nemesis or a femme fatale figure. This tendency seems to be pushed to the extreme recently and the adaptations of the heroine in question gravitate towards a sexually confident, overtly self-aware, as well as dominant (both sexually and mentally) rival to Holmes. The idea behind this paper is to investigate the transformation of Irene Adler’s character from the originally debatably scandalous adventuress to her modern portrayal as a dominatrix in the BBC miniseries, Sherlock. Hence, I will concentrate on this most recent take on the woman in the episode “A Scandal in Belgravia,” attempting to analyse in what ways the creators of the show go back to the roots and succeed in capturing the essence of Irene Adler’s figure, and conversely – in what measure does this adaptation epitomize the changes done to the character over the years of reinterpreting and diverting from its literary counterpart.
- Published
- 2014
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