This is canon btw
Ahhhh. THIS I somehow missed. Thank you for drawing it to my attention. đ
âThe veiled lodgerâ right? The mysterious woman in veil.
KAKDJDOSJD DJSFKNFJCJD
Tag: canon
sherlock holmes stories are a lot less about good versus evil and more about an exceptional and very gay man wanting to help marginalized people and people in danger and help them avoid violence, ruin, and humiliation. a lot of adaptations get that wrong and focus on defeating larger than life villains that loom huge over everything. that really didnât exist in the original stories.Â
âa lot of adaptations get that wrongâ
Yes, they do.
i honestly? donât even know how to be in a different fandom?
me either đŚ
Recruiting for acd sherlock. Itâs kind of the same and kind of different all at the same time!
Iâm listening.
Well, for one, ACD is dead so we know he isnât going to come out with âthis all happened because of your murder sister but you turned it into a dog.â  Unless this is the undiscovered story that is mouldering an attic somewhere⌠Â
For me, with ACD-verse, more flexibility is availableâŚ
If you arenât feeling the angst, you can pretend that Holmes and Watson just lived happily together in 221B for all time and that Mary and any other separations were invented for literary purposes. Â
If you want more angst, you always have the increased need for secrecy/danger for men in a same-sex relationship in Victorian England. There are all kinds of nice books to read about Victorian society in general and the perception/treatment of homosexuality in that era more specifically. Â
Also, if you absolutely must do the Mary thingâŚâŚthere are easier ways to get rid of her with all the contagion, dangers of childbirth etc. There isnât really any guilt-inducing emotional attachment necessary because sheâs only mentioned in passing in canon.  This doesnât mean I hate the idea of Mary.  I would love a Victorian villain Mary or a story where Watson gets married to Mary to cover up his same-sex relationship and she does the same so she can continue her relationship with a female partner in peace.
Finally, I feel like writing ACD-style Holmes/Watson is easier because there is more room for interpretation about personalities/appearances, etc.  I always like when people make characters âtheir ownâ even if they are BBC-verse but I know others are bothered if they are âOOC.â  I think there is more wiggle room for character development when there is not a video version (although a lot of ppl use specific Victorian TV versions for their universes, I am kind of just in some foggy world of my own making).
These are great things. I really do enjoy the ACD stories and the Granada series. And some of my favorite fanfics are Victorian or set in the first half of the 20th century. Most of all itâs good to remember that no one adaptation is the last word on Sherlock Holmes adaptations.
Are there hugs and chocolate chip cookies? Because I need a solid supply of those in my fandom.
Oh, yes, of course. And two words: Turkish Baths.Â
And moustaches and arm-in-arm strolling in morning suits and Holmes giggling and being a big soft nerd and Watson being in awe of him all the time and them being so sweet and snarky together. Also Turkish Baths.
Iâm sensing something a Turkish Bath theme.Â
Turkish baths are canon. Also, once you start on ACD, the fandom opens up to all the other variations. Want to throw in Zero Effect or Sherlock in the 23rd Century or whatever, you can.
The next time I see the âit wasnât canon argument,â Iâm going to run screaming at you with copies of the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1885 and news articles detailing the treatment of convicted homosexuals in 19th Century England, and then continue screaming until you understand exactly what would have happened to Arthur Conan Doyle had he explicitly written Sherlock Holmes and John Watson as gay lovers.Â
So, I wrote this a bit cheekily last night, but now I want to expand on it with some actual facts. Â I see a lot of people saying, âOh, back in the 19th century, Sherlock and John couldnât openly be together.â And thatâs true, but whatâs at the heart of that sentiment is this one, âArthur Conan Doyle couldnât have written them openly together, because the general public would assume he was encouraging homosexuality, perhaps was even homosexual himself, and that would have been dangerous.â Hereâs why.
In 1885, the British Parliament enacted section 11 of the he Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885, known as the Labouchere Amendment which prohibited gross indecency between males. It thus became possible to prosecute homosexuals for engaging in sexual acts where buggery or attempted buggery could not be proven. Note that they didnât have to actually catch you in the act, they just had to suspect that you did it. During this time period, many notable men were prosecuted with disastrous results; Lord Arthur Chilton committed suicide after being implicated in Boulton and Park trial involving two transvestites and Oscar Wilde was sentenced to prison and hard labour after being found guilty.
Was there still a homosexual culture in England at the time? Yes, it was around this time that the movement began to flourish, with clandestine gatherings preceding the opening of the first gay pub, The Cave of the Golden Calf in 1912. There was even the beginnings of gay erotica and publishing, but it was still very much subversive and not openly distributed among the public.
The opposite of who Arthur Conan Doyle was; Sherlock Holmes increased subscriptions to The Strand magazine by 30,000. While Oscar Wilde, if not embraced, accepted, the consequences of his actions, Arthur Conan Doyle was not in a position to do that. He received a knighthood in 1902, he was involved in political campaigns and other civic work throughout his lifetime, and he had 5 children to support. He was not in a position to risk what an accusation of buggery would bring.
So, when you look at the situation, Arthur Conan Doyle was unable to go any farther than he had with Holmes and Watson in his original stories. Even if he wanted to. Even if he tried to fill it with as much subtext as possible, he would always have to be mindful of what would happen if he went to far.
This is why this argument bothers me so much. Were Sherlock Holmes in John Watson explicitly in a romantic relationship in the original stories? No, and no one is arguing that they were. Are we intended to imply, with the clues that were safe to include given the environment at the time, that itâs a possibility? Thatâs up to you to decide. But demanding that the only way a relationship could be legitimate is if it had been clearly stated by Arthur Conan Doyle is frustrating because itâs imposing todayâs standards on a time period where they do not fit.Â
Iâm focusing on my love of canon. Canon is incredibly rich. And I love canon Holmes so much. Heâs such a good person, and there is so much I can do with him and Watson (also a gem of a fellow).
Honestly take Sherlock Holmes away from Men because they do stupid things with his stories. Sir Arthur was the only one who nailed it lol and other dudes have been fucking it up for 130 years. Sherlock Holmes actually does have warmth and charm and emotional intelligence. That whole âcalculating machineâ thing was. A really really really transparent lie. Holmes loves helping people.
In Sherlock Irene Adler is just as obsessed with outwitting Holmes as he is with outwitting her, and I feel like thatâs a fundamental misreading of the source material, because in Doyleâs version Holmes happens to get in Ireneâs way, so she does the functional equivalent of trapping him under a cup, sliding a newspaper under him and dumping him out in the backyard.
There were only four people who ever bested Holmes, and she was the one who frustrated him the most, because she didnât give a flying fuck about him. Not only was she a woman (orignal Holmes was pretty sexist), but he was considered irrelevant. That Infuriated him. Sure, Moriarty was a match for Holmes, but Moriarty devoted his life to outwitting him. Irene Adler just did it offhandedly, and thatâs what makes her so amazing
#i have feelings about this#Holmes#literally no interpretation has ever made Adler into the badass she is#she never was in love with him#not even a little#she just#didnât care#it was beautiful#he thinks heâs hot shit and she outwits him without breaking a sweat#and then just leaves#as if she hadnât just destroyed him#irene adler#the real hero
Was he impressed by her? Goodness yes. Did he find their interaction memorable? Oh my, yes, in the same way he found any intellectual battle memorable, and the fact that it wasnât simply with an equal, but a possible superiorâthat made it impossible for him to forget. Did he love her? Lord, no. Thatâs just heteronormativity talking.
Omg this post is back again on my dash. My favourite post. â¤
The Agra treasure, which never brought
anything but a curse yet upon the man who owned it.
The Sign of Four
Ahem.Â
(via stillgosherlocked)
Like, when you know you think you have a treasure, but really it ends up that itâs not a treasure at all, like, you know???
(via sussexbound)
You know whatâs the only fact canon in both ACD version and TFP is?
What?
Victor Trevor was a dog-person.
go away
no
Oh my god.
I-
there is no heterosexual explanation for this and that last sentence has 0 redeeming power
Holmes is so beautiful and his music is a sweet lullaby and Iâm so entranced by him OH LOOK MY FUTURE WIFE NO HOMO
Oh my lord. Itâs The Fucky Problem.
Honestly, Iâm starting to think this sort of thing in ACD is exactly why S3-S4 have gone down the way they have. Maybe there is no Mary in Sherlock⌠because there was no Mary in ACD.