Conan Doyle’s The Lost World (1912), The Poison Belt (1913), and The Land of Mist (1926) feature his scientist hero Professor George Edward Challenger. These novels are obsessed with beginnings and endings thematized for three reasons: first, because Challenger is a scientist; second, because these tales belong to that phase of Conan Doyle’s career in which his Spiritualist beliefs and activities figured prominently in his intellectual and creative life; third, because they belong to a time when a great deal of intellectual and aesthetic attention was being focused on beginnings and endings. Science and Spiritualism seem antagonistic, but Conan Doyle insisted they are not since they explore survival, extinction, Death, new life, utopia and ...
In this essay, I examine Conan Doyle’s Spiritualist works in relation to his Sherlock Holmes canon. ...
As the Victorian age neared its end and the new century presented challenges and new courses of prog...
Over a thirty-year period from the late nineteenth to early twentieth century, Sir Arthur Conan Doyl...
Habitually characterised as a late-appearing variant upon the Victorian Quest Romance, The Lost Worl...
In The Lost World (1912) Arthur Conan Doyle creates the eccentric Professor Challenger, a late Victo...
In The Lost World (1912) Arthur Conan Doyle creates the eccentric Professor Challenger, a late Victo...
Arthur Conan Doyle employed the quest narrative structure in his Professor Challenger novels and sho...
Edited Collection: Challenger Unbound (Revaluating Arthur Conan Doyle's Professor Challenger Narr...
In the plot of this work, A. Conan Doyle applies the theory of poisoned air which fills the cosmic s...
Throughout the nineteenth century, adventure writers created fictional tales of quests into geograph...
Conan Doyle’s œuvre is articulated along three major literary axes and Hélène Machinal accordingly d...
Among the earliest adaptors of Sherlock Holmes was Arthur Conan Doyle. One of the reasons why Holm...
Conan Doyle: Writing, Profession, and Practice approaches Conan Doyle's writing in terms of themes s...
Arthur Conan Doyle, a young physician in general practice in the provinces who had published some fi...
This thesis examines the mistaken premise that Arthur Conan Doyle abandoned rational enquiry in orde...
In this essay, I examine Conan Doyle’s Spiritualist works in relation to his Sherlock Holmes canon. ...
As the Victorian age neared its end and the new century presented challenges and new courses of prog...
Over a thirty-year period from the late nineteenth to early twentieth century, Sir Arthur Conan Doyl...
Habitually characterised as a late-appearing variant upon the Victorian Quest Romance, The Lost Worl...
In The Lost World (1912) Arthur Conan Doyle creates the eccentric Professor Challenger, a late Victo...
In The Lost World (1912) Arthur Conan Doyle creates the eccentric Professor Challenger, a late Victo...
Arthur Conan Doyle employed the quest narrative structure in his Professor Challenger novels and sho...
Edited Collection: Challenger Unbound (Revaluating Arthur Conan Doyle's Professor Challenger Narr...
In the plot of this work, A. Conan Doyle applies the theory of poisoned air which fills the cosmic s...
Throughout the nineteenth century, adventure writers created fictional tales of quests into geograph...
Conan Doyle’s œuvre is articulated along three major literary axes and Hélène Machinal accordingly d...
Among the earliest adaptors of Sherlock Holmes was Arthur Conan Doyle. One of the reasons why Holm...
Conan Doyle: Writing, Profession, and Practice approaches Conan Doyle's writing in terms of themes s...
Arthur Conan Doyle, a young physician in general practice in the provinces who had published some fi...
This thesis examines the mistaken premise that Arthur Conan Doyle abandoned rational enquiry in orde...
In this essay, I examine Conan Doyle’s Spiritualist works in relation to his Sherlock Holmes canon. ...
As the Victorian age neared its end and the new century presented challenges and new courses of prog...
Over a thirty-year period from the late nineteenth to early twentieth century, Sir Arthur Conan Doyl...