Bayram Cigerli Blog

Bigger İnfo Center and Archive

The Many Doctors of Sherlock Holmes

Dr. Marilynne McKay at the Indiana Medical History Museum

Is there a doctor in the house?

In the Canon, the answer is definitely “yes.” Each of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s 60 Sherlock Holmes stories has at least one doctor, either as a major character or referred to and significant by his absence. His name, of course, is Watson.

But many of the other stories include doctors in major roles. You will find them as villains, victims, clients, colleagues, consultants, and suspects, for example. Marilynne McKay, MD, gave a delightful overview of some of the most important last Saturday to a packed audience of about 100 at the Indiana Medical History Museum in Indianapolis.

All Sherlockians know that our hero was inspired by one of Conan Doyle’s medical-school professors, Dr. Joseph Bell. But I learned from Dr. McKay that Dr. Leon Sterndale may have been based on both Stanley and Livingston (as in “Dr. Livingston, I presume?).

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of her talk was a discussion of social ranking of the various medical men in Victorian England. Surgeons learned their profession by apprenticeship and were called “Mr.” Apothecaries, also trained as apprentices, were the equivalent of today’s general practitioners. Only MDs were called “doctor,” but sometimes in the Canon they achieved the loftier title of “Professor” or “Sir.”

This stuff is so interesting it should be in a book – and it is: Nerve and Knowledge: Doctors, Medicine andthe Sherlockian Canon, published by the Baker Street Irregulars. Marilynne McKay wrote one of the chapters, which covers some of the same ground as her Saturday lecture.  Co-editors, Andrew L. Solberg, also spoke Saturday, giving an overview of the book.


“Nerve and Knowledge: Two Lectures on Doctors, Medicine, and Sherlock Holmes” was sponsored by the Illustrious Clients of Indianapolis, the Baker Street Irregulars (both speakers are members), and the Indiana Medical History Museum. Now that’s what I call great synergy. 
Share

Related Posts:

  • Rare First World War German pictures. Part 1There are not many photos available of German soldiers during the First World war. This is because that country lost the Great War.QUOTES".. all this madness, all this rage, all this flaming death of our civilization and our … Read More
  • Dramatic pictures from the First World WarGerman soldiers executing Russian villagers accused of spying Austrian soldiers hanging villagers in Serbia The soldiers take a rest. The last one is resting in peace.This soldier won't be handling the gun anymoreDead Germa… Read More
  • Rare German WW1 pictures: Part 2In the trenches rats were a big problem. They ate up both the corpses and the rations of soldiers. German soldier moves through poison gasGAS ATTACK 1916 (Eyewitnesstohistory)Arthur Empey was an American living in New Jersey … Read More
  • Rare German WW1 pictures: Part 3A German soldiers exposes himself as he throws a hand grenade towards an enemy trench.QUOTES"All through the war the great armament firms were supplied from the enemy countries. The French and the British sold war materials t… Read More
  • The unfair Treaty of Versailles laid the seeds of WW2"The Second World War took place not so much because no one won the First, but because the Versailles Treaty did not acknowledge this truth."Historian Paul Johnson, 1972Woodrow Wilson exalts after the Treaty is signed by the … Read More

0 Comments:

Yorum Gönder