deird1: Fred reading a book (Fred book)
deird1 ([personal profile] deird1) wrote2011-06-20 11:51 am
Entry tags:

values dissonance

It can be rather strange reading books from the 30s.

I'm currently re-reading an Agatha Christie book. So far, Poirot's opinions on the suspects have included:

1) Huge amounts of interest in the murder - not suspicious, because the suspect is a servant, and obsession with death is typical of her class.

2) Offering 50 pounds to buy something that's only worth 20 - highly suspicious, because the suspect is Jewish, and should therefore be good at bargaining.

3) Murder attempts before they were certain that the victim would actually have the huge amounts of money they were being killed for - definitely indicates a female murderer, as women always jump to conclusions.


All of these opinions are being presented as perfectly unremarkable...
cereta: Julie MacKenzie as Miss Marple (Miss Marple)

[personal profile] cereta 2011-06-20 02:12 am (UTC)(link)
I've been a Christie fan since I was 7, and yeah, it's...a thing. The casual classism, xenophobia (some of which she mocks and some of which she sadly buys into), and such is often really jarring.
mercredigirl: Buffy Summers holding a rocket launcher (Buffy + rocket launcher)

[personal profile] mercredigirl 2011-06-20 03:02 am (UTC)(link)
Are you reading Peril at End House or something?

I just - yeah, Christie rubs me the wrong way most of the time, despite my enjoying the plots.
smurasaki: blond person (neutral)

[personal profile] smurasaki 2011-06-20 04:24 am (UTC)(link)
I may be misremembering, but it always seemed to me that the Poirot stories suffered from that more than her others.

Though this does remind me of my attempt to track down and read the detective stories mentioned in her Partners in Crime. The ones I was able to interlibrary loan suffered horribly from Holy Values Dissonance Batman! To the point that things like, oh, the murderer's motive and the behavior of half the cast made no sense at all to a modern person. It was bizarre. The past really is a foreign country.
vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)

[personal profile] vass 2011-06-20 04:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, all of Christie suffers from that, but Poirot is more annoying that way, at least to me. I remember the time he figured out that the murderer was a young woman, because she wore ugly clothes, and no young woman could do that unless there was a nefarious motive.

[personal profile] urania_calliope 2011-06-20 04:32 pm (UTC)(link)
I've only ever read two of her books and "Murder on the Orient Express" is the one I actually remember. My mother loves Agatha Christie so I feel like I should try reading them again so we'd have something to talk about but I found that book so dull. You think these are books I'm just not going to be able to appreciate or are some of her other books 'better' than that one.

(Anonymous) 2011-06-20 07:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Haha, at first I thought you were buying into those being actually legitimate clues. Of course, by the time I got to number three it made more sense than that...