Praising the masculinity of men's male self and the realization of men's own image in the lost world can be a powerful driving force behind his actions and behaviors. Society has created parameters for defining "real" men; not following these norms threatens the man's manhood and stands among the peers. These expectations and demands for masculinity are constantly being strengthened by society. For the classic "Marlboro Man" and James Bond, popular stereotypes of movie heroes such as Indiana Jones and John Wayne make the impression that adventurous women laugh at danger and there is nothing wrong with that Give it.
In Conan Doyle 's "Sir Arthur", Holmes' character Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is a prominent author and has created an extraordinary criminal detective novel by Sherlock Holmes. Conan Doyle was born in Edinburgh on May 22, 1859, and was educated at Stonyhurst University and Edinburgh University. From 1882 to 1890, he worked in the South China Sea. In the study by Scarlet, the first story of 60 detective-specific stories enriched curious readers to be imaginative and made patient like Sir Sherlock Holmes of Sir Arok Conan Doyle. London 's "amateur" detective Baker Street 221 - B combines unusual intelligence and sharp intelligence to unravel a series of confusing mysteries. The purpose of this somewhat ambitious article is to use Marxist literary criticism to understand the literary value of the Sherlock Holmes series.
Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes and BBC's Sherlock Research Report compare the original Holmes novel with the BBC TV series
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is a versatile and complex person and he is an educator, enthusiastic athlete, war reporter, social justice activist, creator of the world's most famous fictitious detective Sherlock Holmes, a history And the author of social novels, and a positive spiritualist. In his recent book, Douglas Collins writes: "UK's last national writer, Arthur Conan Doyle" (13) Irish descendants who grew up in Scotland, a British option And Empire, he is still one of the most popular British writers and national idols