Comparing Murders In The Rue Morgue And The Speckled Band

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Based on my current knowledge of the detective genre, the classic detective would include a person with a strong, confident personality that the reader can relate to in some way. Generally, this means that the detective is an intelligent expert in their field, so the reader can know the detective’s thought process is consistently reliable. For example, Sherlock Holmes is a professional detective sought out by Helen Stoner in “The Speckled Band” to help save her life. She wanted his help because he was the expert detective, so Holmes become more trustworthy to the reader. The detective also needs to be observant and perceptive to their surroundings. This is evident in “Murders in the Rue Morgue” when Dupin is going about the crime scene. Although …show more content…

He describes Edgar Allan Poe as the “father of the detective story” because his character Dupin was a detective-like character before anything like that existed in the real life police world. Poe developed the idea of having a sealed room where the crime occurred, having a suspect who was wrongfully committed, and having the true criminal be the least likely culprit. Those aspects appear in various stories since the era of Poe. Gates’s claims the classic detective has powers of observation and rational thinking far beyond the new evolving technologies of the era when he says, “Fingerprint and ballistic tests are objective tests that anyone can be trained to do, whereas the skills of observation and ratiocination are not only of a higher caliber but also seemingly more likely for a reader of Holmes to possess”. In comparison to the police, the detective is an amateur, but that does not hinder their ability to arrive at the final truth. It is their ability to come to the truth that assures the reader that good will always hinder evil. The reader wants justice to be served and to see the conflict resolved in a satisfying

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