Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Red-Headed League

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London is a popular location for movies and novels to be utilized as the setting. There are numerous historic venues that allow for a variety of sets and scenes. London has played a starring role in many blockbuster movies thanks to its epic skyline, atmospheric streets and royal palaces. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote many different short stories with a main character, Sherlock Holmes, whose job was to discover the solution of different crimes or suspicious activities in the area. He lived in a flat at 221b Baker Street in central London. In The Red-Headed League, one can better understand the organization of London back when the streets were extremely narrow and lined with small shops. “In other words, late-nineteenth-century London is a cosmopolitan space – a huge city bringing together new populations, new commercial goods, and new forms of transportation into one giant hodgepodge of activity“.

The City of …show more content…

The British Empire brings abundances of new things and ideas to London but also provides yet more opportunity for thieves like John Clay. The proximity of Wilson’s pawnshop in a discreet and rundown square to the City and Suburban Bank on the bustling avenue highlights London’s diversity. Watson explains the difference between these two sides of the same block as being like the difference between the front of a picture and the back. One side all energetic and full of activity while the other is dark blankness. During the day, he and Holmes take the subway to Wilson’s neighborhood, and venture down some recognizable streets. They finally go off to enjoy some of the high culture that urban life provides. Upon returning at night, however, Watson describes the exact same location as “an endless labyrinth of gas-lit streets”. This suggests that the dark and mysterious characteristics of the area have come to the

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