ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
6th Grade Videos 46 videos
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Main Idea 1. Which of the statements is best supported by the passage?
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Textual Analysis 3. Which of the following best summarizes the author's feelings about welfare?
ELA 6: The History of Mystery 2169 Views
Share It!
Description:
Sherlock Holmes might be the most famous fictional detective, but he comes from a long line of sleuths going all the way back to ancient history.
Transcript
- 00:00
when you think of mysteries, maybe you think of Sherlock Holmes with his
- 00:06
deerstalker hat and magnifying glass. or maybe you go straight to the newer
- 00:10
Benedict Cumberbatch model .but mysteries are way older than Benedict. [actor playing Sherlock Holmes pictured]
- 00:15
heck they are even older than the original Holmes tracing their origins
- 00:19
all the way back to ancient Rome. well the initial interest in mysteries wasn't
Full Transcript
- 00:23
kicked off by fictional stories but by real-life mysteries as presented by
- 00:27
Cicero. well Cicero was a lot of things, a
- 00:30
philosopher and orator a statesman and a whole bunch of other things that would [statue of Cicero pictured]
- 00:34
give hand cramps to whoever had to engrave his bust. Oh what sorry bust dude
- 00:39
and we left one off the list. he was also a lawyer. you might need a bigger plaque
- 00:44
there. anyway some of the speeches he gave in courtrooms really got the public
- 00:48
interested in mysteries and crime. for instance one case was about a guy
- 00:53
accused of killing his father. already pretty juicy stuff right? well however [son mourns father in cemetery]
- 00:57
Cicero argued that the murder wasn't committed by the accused, but by others
- 01:02
who wanted to frame the son and steal his family's fortune. had Cicero
- 01:06
specialized in tax law the surge of interest in mysteries might not have
- 01:10
happened. well unpaid indirect taxes on salt evaporation ponds and really don't
- 01:15
put butts in seats and movie theaters right? well when it comes to mystery [movie on taxes plays to empty theater]
- 01:19
fiction it would take nearly 2,000 years for it to really get going with the work
- 01:23
of Edgar Allan Poe. although you might know him more for his poem about that
- 01:28
Raven, he essentially invented the detective fiction story with his tales
- 01:32
of sea Auguste Dupin, laying the groundwork of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's
- 01:38
iconic Sherlock Holmes. we hope Cumberbatch sends a thank you
- 01:42
card to Poe. never known it .well mystery fiction continued on through the work of [modern Holmes pictured]
- 01:47
Agatha Christie whose fictional detectives have cured wha-ho and Jane
- 01:52
Marple solved more than their fair share of cases, and the tradition didn't stop
- 01:58
there .rolling along through the writings of Dashiell Hammett, whose cynical trench
- 02:03
coat wearing anti-heroes put a new twist on the genre. great for fans of mysteries
- 02:08
but even better for people who sold trench coats. [ man grins from behind many trench coats]
Related Videos
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Main Idea 1. Which of the statements is best supported by the passage?
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Textual Analysis 3. Which of the following best summarizes the author's feelings about welfare?
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Comparing and Contrasting. In this sentence, what is compared to what?
What's an emotional appeal? Is that like when someone naturally attracts members of the opposite sex by crying all the time?